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Prunus domestica Reine Claude Dorée - Common plum

Prunus domestica Reine Claude Dorée ou verte
European plum, Common plum, Garden plum

4,9/5
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Arbre magnifique, en bonne santé reçu 4 jours après commande et installé immédiatement à côté d'un reine-claude d'Oullins pour la pollinisation. Bravo pour l'emballage! Pas une branche de cassée ! Hâte de faire les premières recoltes!

Valerie, 14/05/2023

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This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty

More information

Value-for-money
Easy-to-grow variety. Fruits ripen mid-August, round and globose, 4 cm (2in) in diameter, green with a golden yellow halo in the sun. Pale yellow flesh, juicy and sweet, of excellent taste quality. Consumed fresh or processed. Not self-fertile, it requires the presence of another plum tree to fruit satisfactorily.
Flavour
Sugary
Height at maturity
8 m
Spread at maturity
5 m
Exposure
Sun, Partial shade
Best planting time January, November to December
Recommended planting time January to February, October to December
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Flowering time April
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Harvest time August
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Description

The Golden or Green Reine Claude Plum is a self-fertile variety that is easy to grow. Its fruits ripen in mid-August and are round and globose, measuring 4cm (2in) in diameter. They have a thin skin that is green with a golden yellow hue when exposed to sunlight. The pale yellow flesh is juicy and sweet, with excellent taste qualities. It can be eaten fresh or processed. This variety is a good pollinator but is not self-fertile, so it requires the presence of another plum tree to fruit satisfactorily.

The original area of plums is believed to be Syria, not China. During the Roman hegemony over the region various local fruits, including the plum, were introduced to Rome. The Golden or Green Reine Claude Plum has been known since then. The Golden or Green Reine Claude Plum was named in honour of Claude of France, the wife of King Francis I, nicknamed "The Good Queen".

This fruit tree naturally reaches a height of up to 8m (26ft) at maturity. Its free and spreading silhouette is appreciated, and with proper pruning it will be easy to harvest. It requires little care and maintenance due to its natural openness. It thrives in full sun or partial shade and grows in all types of rich, moist, and deep soils, even heavy ones, but without limestone.

Its leaves are oval, almost oblong, with serrated edges and slightly pubescent. Flowering occurs in April for this semi-late variety. The tree is completely covered with white flowers that appear on the previous year's branches. It is not self-fertile, so it is necessary to plant another plum tree nearby: the Reine Claude d'Oullins or Mirabelle de Nancy varieties are particularly well-suited.
The fruits, Reine Claude plums, are round and globose, measuring 4cm (2in) in diameter. They have a thin skin that is green with a golden yellow hue when exposed to sunlight. The pale yellow flesh is juicy and sweet.

Slightly susceptible to fruit splitting before ripeness but without monilia, the Golden or Green Reine Claude Plum is a variety tolerant to Bark-Split disease and withstands handling and transportation well.

The plums are consumed fresh under the tree, in fruit salads, as well as in desserts, pastries, and as accompaniments to meats and savoury dishes. They can be transformed into jams, of course, but also into preserved fruits, compotes etc. They can also be used to make spirits.

 

 

Prunus domestica Reine Claude Dorée - Common plum in pictures

Prunus domestica Reine Claude Dorée - Common plum (Foliage) Foliage
Prunus domestica Reine Claude Dorée - Common plum (Harvest) Harvest

Plant habit

Height at maturity 8 m
Spread at maturity 5 m
Growth rate normal

Fruit

Fruit colour green
Fruit diameter 4 cm
Flavour Sugary
Use Table, Jam, Patisserie, Alcohol
Harvest time August

Flowering

Flower colour white
Flowering time April
Flower size 2 cm
Flowering description The white flowers appear before the leaves on branches from the previous year. They are carried by a pubescent peduncle and have a pubescent or villous calyx. The early flowering begins in March and is therefore exposed to frost, but it is so abundant that frost rarely affects the harvest.

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour medium green

Botanical data

Genus

Prunus

Species

domestica

Cultivar

Reine Claude Dorée ou verte

Family

Rosaceae

Other common names

European plum, Common plum, Garden plum

Origin

Eastern Europe

Product reference79067

Planting and care

Easy to grow, the Golden or Green Reine Claude Plum Tree thrives in all types of light, rich, neutral or acidic soil, moist but not excessively humid, and free from limestone. Ensure drainage in the planting hole by adding a thin layer of gravel. Dig a hole two to three weeks before planting, twice as wide and deep as the pot. On planting day, place the tree with its pot in a basin of water, allowing the soil to be moistened through capillary action. Add compost to the bottom of the hole. Install the tree in the hole, fill with a mixture of soil and compost. Do not bury the graft union. Firmly tamp down the soil around the base. The root ball should be completely covered. Water generously.

In winter you can add a small handful of wood ash, rich in potash, to improve fruiting.

Planting period

Best planting time January, November to December
Recommended planting time January to February, October to December

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow
Type of use Border, Free-standing, Orchard
Hardiness Hardy down to -29°C (USDA zone 5) Show map
Exposure Sun, Partial shade
Soil pH Neutral
Soil type Silty-loamy (rich and light), rich and well-drained

Care

Pruning instructions Only prune as necessary as plum trees become sensitive to injuries and therefore diseases. Apply a healing paste afterwards to protect it. Pruning the plum tree for training: this serves to form the structure of the tree. In the first year, during winter but outside of freezing periods, prune the tree in order to obtain 4 to 5 branches oriented outward. Pruning for fruiting: after the harvest of the plums, and outside of freezing periods, remove dead wood and fragile branches. Remove any fruits remaining on the tree and burn them. Remove suckers (shoots at the base of the tree).
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time September to October
Soil moisture Wet
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
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