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"Ember. Late Summer. (Prunus salicina Shiro x P. americana var) 1936... red-blushed fruit...Rich yellow juicy sweet flesh is very firm and meaty but tender.... Tastes and looks like an apricot...
La Crescent. Late Summer. (Prunus salicina Shiro x P. americana Howard Yellow) 1923.... thin-skinned yellow fruit is sometimes blushed with a little pink. Tender yellow juicy fle...aromatic and suggestive of apricots...
South Dakota. Late Summer. SD 27. Prunus americana unknown parentage. 1949... tough yellow skin with bright red blush. Medium-firm yellow flesh is meaty, juicy, sweet... very long flowering period... pollinator for all hybrid plums...developed before 1907.
Hanska. Summer. (Prunus americana x P. simonii) 1908. Medium-sized bright red fruit with a heavy bluish bloom. Firm fragrant yellow semi-freestone flesh. When cooked, the fruit has a strong apricot-like flavor reminiscent of its Chinese “apricot plum” parentage. "
All info is from the Fedco catalog, edited for brevity. It seems like a lot. On the other hand, how much does 1 plum, or 1 apple, cost at the grocery store? Each scion is $5. If these take, each grafted branch can give a couple dozen a year, for potentially many years. They are intended to give a diversity of size, shape, flavor, color, and ripening times. The main trend here is 3 with apricot flavor. I hope they are much more adaptable to this area, compared to apricots. Toka has some of that too.