Not necessarily. If you have other plants in your garden (Flowers, shrubs, etc.) you will not need two apple trees. If you have no other plants in your garden, then yes, you will need two apple trees to pollinate.
You will need two apple trees, but for best fruit production you should use two different varieties (see pollinization chart at http://www.acnursery.com/apple_pollinizer.pdf).
all but 6???
Apple trees are grafted to combine the desirable traits of two different apple tree varieties. Grafting allows for faster growth, increased disease resistance, and improved fruit quality in apple trees. By grafting, farmers can ensure consistent and high-quality apple production.
3 Trees Explanation: It says but two for three trees and they talk about one tree so that means that the other two are the but two.
The candy apple is in the forest in between the two trees. Hope you find it! :)
No, pear trees and apple trees cannot cross-pollinate successfully because they belong to different genera (Malus and Pyrus). To ensure proper pollination for fruit production, it is best to plant two apple trees or two pear trees of compatible varieties in close proximity.
The two types of trees are coniferous (pine, spruce) and decideious (poplar, birch, willow). Those are the two MAIN types if trees.
After the flowers have been fertalized. Remember this takes two apple trees unless you have a hybrid apple tree!
well, one is that one apple tree contains apples which are nutritious, and edible to basically any animal, two, one apple tree can create more apple trees when one apple falls off, and more and more and more. and #3, and apple tree is also beneficial because they are not only providers of food/nutrients/health, but they are also trees, and trees help us breath (duh)
The apple is commercially the most important of the world's deciduous fruit trees, and is follwed by the pear. In the United States, however, the pear ranks third, after the apple and peach.
two trees and three fruits
Apple trees require pruning twice a year. In summer shorten all the new shoots by two thirds, in winter prune back to one bud from fruiting spurs.