Quince Tree Meeches Prolific (Cydonia oblonga 'Meeches Prolific') 1Quince Tree Meeches Prolific (Cydonia oblonga 'Meeches Prolific') 1Quince Tree Meeches Prolific (Cydonia oblonga 'Meeches Prolific') 2Quince Tree Meeches Prolific (Cydonia oblonga 'Meeches Prolific') 3Meeches Prolific Maiden Quince Tree

Meech's Prolific Quince Trees

Cydonia oblonga Meeches ProlificPlant guarantee for 1 yearFeefo logo

The details

  • Cooking
  • Self fertile
  • Perfumed fruit
  • Lovely pale pink blossom
  • Cropping early Oct
  • Heaviest fruiting variety in UK
  • Up to 500g per quince in ideal conditions
  • RHS Plants for Pollinators
Choose a plant formWhat to expect
All
Bareroot
Choose a size
Maiden
Bareroot
£26.99each
Qty
1-2
3 - 9
10 +
£
£ 26.99
£ 24.99
£ 22.99
In Stock
Bush
Bareroot
£32.99each
Qty
1-2
3 - 9
10 +
£
£ 32.99
£ 29.99
£ 26.99
In Stock
1/2 Standard
Bareroot
£39.99each
Qty
1-2
3 - 9
10 +
£
£ 39.99
£ 36.99
£ 35.99
In Stock

Recommended extras

Tree Tag
Tree Tag Everlasting, Engraved Metal From £10.00
Rootgrow
Rootgrow Mycorrhizal Friendly Fungi From £5.88
Tree Planting Pack
Tree Planting Pack Standard Tree Planting Pack From £13.99

Description

Meech's Prolific Quince Trees

Meech's Prolific is the official name, but it's spelt Meeches in plenty of places so take your pick. They are one of the three best grafted fruiting quinces for the British climate, the others being Vranja and Serbian Gold
Meech's Prolific is self-fertile, flowers in May and carries good crops of large, highly scented golden fruit which are ready for picking around early October, when the colour turns rich yellow. They can be real whoppers up to half a kilo, over a pound, in ideal conditions - usually in the South of England and Wales.

Browse our range of quince trees or our full variety of fruit trees.

Features:

  • Cooking
  • Self fertile
  • Perfumed fruit
  • Lovely pale pink blossom
  • Cropping early October, when the fruit turns yellow
  • Heaviest fruiting variety in UK
  • Up to 500g per quince in ideal conditions
  • RHS Plants for Pollinators

Quinces are extremely hardy, but they do need a good summer to crop well. In Britain, this means that they are reliable as far North as Yorkshire, as long as they have a sheltered sunny South facing spot. All quinces have decorative flowers - these are slightly pink - and make ideal subjects for a sunny wall, where they are easy to train on wires. For those who try to bring more aromas into the garden, the fruit on the tree is deliciously fragrant. We have one at home which fills the garden with scent in October when its quinces are ripe and almost everything else has shut up shop for the winter.

The three classic uses for quinces are stewed slowly with meats, mixed with other fruit to make fillings for pies (with apple or pear and blackcurrant is a good combo), or used to make Quince cheese, jam or jelly/marmalade. Quince liquor is popular in several European countries - look out for Polish Pigwa (pronounced Pigva) Vodka if you want to give it a try, it's pretty easy to find in the UK. 

Planting Instructions

Did You Know?

Originally from Dagestani and Iranian mountain slopes (very cold in winter with long hot summers), quinces were classified as Pyrus cydonia, in the pear family, but now have their own genus, Cydonia oblonga. Kydonia, today Chania, is an ancient town in Crete.

In 1888, Reverend William Witler Meech of New Jersey, USA, published one of the most important books on Quince cultivation, sensibly titled "Quince Culture: An illustrated hand-book for the propagation and cultivation of the quince, with descriptions of its varieties, insect enemies, diseases and their remedies."
According to Reverend Meech, this cultivar is from Connecticut, and at first he sensibly labelled it the Pear-Shaped Orange Quince, but according to page 21 of his book, he "only consented to change it to Meech's Prolific when my horticultural friends showed that it needed a different name to avoid being confounded with some of the other pear-shaped varieties."