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Peaches
Prunus persica Late. Seedling of Chinese Cling. Marshallville, GA, about 1870. Also called Georgia Belle.
Old-time white-fleshed favorite,
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Prunus persica Mid-Late. Bred by Jim Friday of Coloma, MI, as part of his Stellar Series in the 1980s.
Boldly red-blazed skin with yellow firm
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Prunus persica Mid. Harrow Ag Res Stn, Ontario, Canada, 1968.
Large fruit with a red blush over gold skin. Flesh is sweet and juicy, an overall
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Prunus persica Early. Medium-to-large yellow-fleshed semi-clingstone peach with excellent flavor. Recommended for colder districts. Z4/5.
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Prunus persica Late. One of the Stellar series peaches bred for cold hardiness, disease resistance, size and flavor.
This one checks all the
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Prunus persica Early. Large juicy sweet yellow-fleshed freestone fruit. Tastes just like a peach should taste! Z5.
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Prunus persica 15-25'. Commonly grown as hardy disease-resistant rootstock. Known to grow relatively true to type. Fruit best for processing, decent for fresh eating. Plant for fruit or grafting. Z4.
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Peaches
Peaches are self-pollinating; one tree alone is sufficient. Plant 15–20' apart.
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About Peaches