No, there is no such thing as a synthetic apple (yet). Apples are the seed-bearing bodies of apple trees and are completely natural, although they are often coated with man-made waxes to keep them shiny, and are often sprayed with poisonous pesticides during growth.
yes, they are people mix peach seeds and plum seeds
-by Cynthia Muniz
Cherries do. So do nectarines.
Fruit like peaches and nectarines are "fleshy".
nectarines
A peach
The correct spelling for the fruit is nectarine instead of necteron. Nectarines are the same species as peaches. They are a juicy fruit with smooth skin.
Nannyberry is an edible fruit from the viburnum lentago bush. Nectarines are a fruit.
Nectarines are not a product of cross pollination. They are peaches that do not have fuzz. Some peach seeds produce trees that bear fruit that is not fuzzy. Sometimes a peach tree will bear both nectarines and peaches. Growers commonly graft branches from nectarine trees onto peach trees in order to produce nectarines.
Mango nectarines have the skin of the nectarine, and the flesh is more like the mango. So, the fruit should be fairly firm, but give a little when squeezed, when ripe. Just like the nectarine and the mango.
Peaches, along with Cherries, plums, apricots and nectarines, are all part of the stone fruit family.
where were nectarines originated
A drupe fruit is a fruit with a fleshy outer skin surrounding an inner stone - it is a category of fruit, not a single fruit in particular. The 'Drupe' family includes plums, damsons, apricots, cherries, olives, mangos, nectarines and peaches.
Yes, because we usually (in California) get lots of sun. You can grow fruit mostly anywhere.