When to Plant Apple in Sydney — Warm Temperate Guide

Apple

Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Australia's most popular deciduous fruit tree, but success depends entirely on chill hours. Most varieties need 400-1000+ hours below 7°C. Planting a high-chill variety in Brisbane or Cairns is throwing money away. Grafted trees on dwarfing rootstocks (M26, M9, MM106) are essential for home gardens - seedling trees take 8-10 years to fruit and rarely produce true to type.

How to Grow Apple in Warm Temperate Australia

When to Plant

Plant bare root June-August. Sydney hills and western suburbs get adequate chill for medium-chill varieties. Coastal areas marginal.

Soil
Deep, well-drained loam. Heavy clay must be amended with gypsum and compost or use raised mounds.
pH Range
6.0-6.5
Sunlight
Full sun, minimum 6 hours direct. Morning sun preferred to dry dew and reduce fungal pressure.

Companion plants: Nasturtium, Comfrey, Chives, Borage

Avoid planting near: Walnut (juglone toxicity), Grass right to trunk (competition)

Warm Temperate Growing Tips for Apple

Recommended Varieties

  • Gala
  • Pink Lady
  • Sundowner
  • Anna
  • Dorsett Golden

Key Challenges

  • Fruit fly increasing in range southward
  • Codling moth
  • Variable chill year to year

Pro Tips

  • Hills district and Blue Mountains are ideal within this zone.
  • Coastal Sydney is marginal - stick to low-chill varieties.
  • Full netting essential for both codling moth and fruit fly.

Harvesting Apple

When ready: Background colour changes from green to yellow (for red varieties, check the shaded side). Seeds turn dark brown. Fruit detaches with a gentle upward twist. Flesh is crisp and juicy, not starchy.

How to harvest: Cup fruit in hand and twist upward with a slight roll. Never pull downward - breaks fruiting spurs. Handle gently - bruised apples rot in storage.

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