Pear variety for Zone 5

kazandrew2

New member
I know this is a cooking, not a gardening group- but there a lot of
gardeners here & I'm more interested in good tasting pears than
high-yields or ease of cultivation.

That said--- I'm in Zone 5 in NY & I think I'd like a couple dwarf
pears for the back yard. I buy a dozen pears every year and am lucky
to get 4 good ones.

I ought to do a little better fighting squirrels in the back yard.
[and I'm already fighting them for veggies, peaches and cherries so
that won't be a new battle]

What variety would you go for? I like to eat a *good* pear out of
hand-- but I've really gotten a taste for pears with a little
gorgonzola and honey dressing.

If there is a good canning pear, I might be tempted to can some for
winter.

Jim
 
On Sat, 23 Apr 2011 08:11:38 -0400, Jim Elbrecht
wrote:


They're all good.
Pears require a different variety for pollinating, and not all are
suitable so check. I recommend "semi-dwarf"... dwarf fruit trees are
rather small, for the effort they don't produce much.
Buy here: http://www.schoharienurseries.com/
 
On Apr 23, 5:11?am, Jim Elbrecht wrote:

I'm a big fan of Bartletts. They keep well and don't have a lot of
problems with pollination in my part of the world (zone 8, Pac NW).
Good luck!

Ob. Cooking: I grill (flat)bread with crumbles of blue or gorgonzola
and crispy pancetta, then top with pear slices. An appetizer fit for
company!
 
On Apr 23, 7:11?am, Jim Elbrecht wrote:

It's good you're getting dwarfs. I grow apples, sweet and pie
cherries, peaches, plums, blackberries, raspberries and strawberries.
I don't grow pears because they attract wasps like nothing else.
Don't allow any fruit to stay on the ground. How about asian pears?

--Bryan
 
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