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Golden Delicious Apple Scion Wood – 10 Fresh Cuttings for Grafting | 4–8 Inches Long | Classic Sweet Apple Variety | Orchard Propagation Pack

Golden Delicious Apple Scion Wood – 10 Fresh Cuttings for Grafting | 4–8 Inches Long | Classic Sweet Apple Variety | Orchard Propagation Pack

Regular price $97.50
Regular price Sale price $97.50
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Grow your own Golden Delicious Apple trees with this pack of 10 freshly cut apple scion wood cuttings, perfect for grafting onto compatible rootstock or existing apple trees. These scions are taken from healthy trees and prepared for propagation, giving home orchard growers and grafting enthusiasts a reliable way to expand their fruit tree collection.

Each cutting measures approximately 4–8 inches long and is about the width of a pencil, with several healthy nodes suitable for grafting. Golden Delicious apples are a classic favorite, known for their sweet, mellow flavor, excellent for fresh eating, baking, and applesauce.

These cuttings are ideal for gardeners, orchard hobbyists, and homesteaders looking to propagate a proven apple variety and grow productive fruit trees in their own backyard orchard.

You will receive:
✔️ 10 Golden Delicious apple scion cuttings
✔️ Length: approximately 4–8 inches each
✔️ Pencil-width scion wood with multiple nodes
✔️ Fresh cut scion wood for grafting
✔️ Carefully packed for safe delivery

🌼 Growing Information
Common Name: Golden Delicious Apple
Botanical Name: Malus domestica
Plant Type: Deciduous fruit tree
Growth Stage: Scion wood cutting (for grafting)
Sun Requirements: Full sun (6–8 hours daily)
Soil: Well-draining loamy soil
Watering: Moderate; consistent moisture after grafting
Mature Height: 12–15 feet on dwarf rootstock (larger on standard rootstock)
Growth Rate: Moderate
USDA Zones: 4–8
Propagation Method: Grafting onto compatible apple rootstock

💡 Care Tip:
Store scion wood in the refrigerator inside a sealed bag with slightly moist paper towel until ready to graft. For best success, graft during late winter or early spring while trees are still dormant.

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