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Kandil Sinap Apple Scionwood (Spring 2024)


An ancient, exotic, very unusual dessert apple from Turkey. Also known as Candil Sinap, Cantil Sinap, Jubilee.

Kandil Sinap is an ancient apple that grows on a vigorous, distinctively pyriform (narrow, upright, and pyramidal, like a pear tree) tree that will require careful training. It needs to be thinned well and early to prevent biennialism, and it is recommended that this tree be planted in a sheltered location to avoid premature drop caused by wind. Kandil Sinap is fireblight resistant.

Kandil Sinap is about as exotic as it gets. Named after the Sinop Region in Turkey, the apple is bizarrely elongated with a beautiful, pale golden skin that is splashed red. While its strange appearance is definitely a conversation starter, the flavor is actually excellent. The crisp, white flesh is sweet, perfumed, and slightly vinous. If you want a delicious apple that stands out from the crowd, this is your tree. These apples will store for over three months, though they should be handled carefully to avoid bruising.

The Sinop region is a small peninsula on the southern shore of the Black Sea. The Greeks settled and named the region in the 7th century BC, and the Romans conquered the area in 70 BC. In 1081, the city of Sinop was captured by the Turks, and in 1614 it was looted and burned by Cossack raiders. In 1853, in the Battle of Sinop, the Russians destroyed an Ottoman squadron, causing Britain and France to enter the Crimean War. I like to imagine a single Kandil Sinap tree serenely growing in a walled garden throughout all this history, elegantly dripping gold and red apples.

Volume Pricing

Premiums are included in the following prices if applicable. These prices are for regular scion. Add $1 for clean scion.

Quantity Kandil Sinap Apple Scion
1 $12.00
2-5 $7.00
6-10 $6.00
11-99 $5.00
100+ $4.00

Order Your Scions

Select clean or regular:

$12.00 ea.

This is the full retail price for orders of 1 scion. You can get these scion for as low as $4.00 each – see Volume Pricing above. More about Pricing & Grading.

21 in stock
Quantity
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Clean vs. Regular

Our clean scion is harvested from trees grown on G.16, which is extremely sensitive to viruses. These trees would not have survived if the scion contained viruses. Our clean wood has not been lab tested. Regular = may contain one of the common latent viruses; this is not usually a problem and can be used with most rootstocks.

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Kandil Sinap is an ancient apple that grows on a vigorous, distinctively pyriform (narrow, upright, and pyramidal, like a pear tree) tree that will require careful training. It needs to be thinned well and early to prevent biennialism, and it is recommended that this tree be planted in a sheltered location to avoid premature drop caused by wind. Kandil Sinap is fireblight resistant.

Kandil Sinap is about as exotic as it gets. Named after the Sinop Region in Turkey, the apple is bizarrely elongated with a beautiful, pale golden skin that is splashed red. While its strange appearance is definitely a conversation starter, the flavor is actually excellent. The crisp, white flesh is sweet, perfumed, and slightly vinous. If you want a delicious apple that stands out from the crowd, this is your tree. These apples will store for over three months, though they should be handled carefully to avoid bruising.

The Sinop region is a small peninsula on the southern shore of the Black Sea. The Greeks settled and named the region in the 7th century BC, and the Romans conquered the area in 70 BC. In 1081, the city of Sinop was captured by the Turks, and in 1614 it was looted and burned by Cossack raiders. In 1853, in the Battle of Sinop, the Russians destroyed an Ottoman squadron, causing Britain and France to enter the Crimean War. I like to imagine a single Kandil Sinap tree serenely growing in a walled garden throughout all this history, elegantly dripping gold and red apples.


The Fruit

Fruit Type

Category: Apple
Subcategory: Heirloom, Disease-Resistant, Hot-Climate

Fruit Uses & Storage

Uses: fresh eating, storage
Storage duration: three plus months (approximate, depending on storage conditions)

Fruit Appearance

Skin color: yellow
Flesh color: white

Fruit Origins

Parentage: unknown
Origin: Turkey
Introduced in: 1700s
Introduced by:

The Environment

Calendar & Geography

USDA zones: 6 - 8
Chill hours: Not yet determined
Ripening date: Sep 29 (approximate, in New York State) + 14 days after McIntosh

Diseases & Pests

Fireblight: Very Resistant

Pollination

Pollination Factors

Bloom group: 3
Is it self-fertile? N
Is it fertile? Y
Ploidy: Diploid

Pollination Partners

This table shows the first few results from a full search for pollenizers of Kandil Sinap Apple. Please see our Pollenizer Search to run other queries and read how the application uses various factors. Also read more about fruit tree pollination.

Tree Ships Currently in Stock
Virginia Crab Apple 2024 0
Florina Apple 2024 0
Porter's Perfection Apple 2024 0
Elstar Apple 2024 0
Rubinette Apple 2024 0
St. Edmund's Russet Apple 2024 0
Spitzenburg Esopus Apple 2024 0
Liberty Apple 2024 0
Mother Apple 2024 0
Binet Rouge Apple 2024 0
Freyberg Apple 2024 0

See all pollination matches for Kandil Sinap Apple






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