This is a twig for grafting. Fall.
Mild-bittersweet perry pear. Found south of Gloucester, England, early 1800s, and later grafted and distributed by the Long Ashton Research Center in Bristol.
Small russeted egg-shaped fruit is greenish yellow and often blushed with orange-red. Fruits are easily shaken from the tree when ripe in early to mid-fall. Also called Hedgehog as the drops can resemble baby hedgehogs curled up in the grass.
Low in acid and tannin and a great sweet addition to perry blends. (S.G. 1.052) Scab resistant and precocious. Blooms late. Z4.
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