Pink Lady® Apple Tree (Cripps Pink)
Malus 'Pink Lady'
Mature Height: 12 to 15 ft.
Mature Spread: 12 to 15 ft.
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| Bloom Color: | Creamy white to pale pink |
| Bloom Period: | Spring |
| Fall Color: | Yellow to orange |
| Foliage Color: | Green |
| Genus & Species: | Malus 'Pink Lady' |
| Growth Rate: | Moderate |
| Mature Height: | 12 to 15 ft. |
| Mature Spread: | 12 to 15 ft. |
| Soil Type: | Moist well draining soil |
| Sun Exposure: | Full sun |
| Zone: | 5 to 9 |
In spring, Cripps Pink announces its arrival as one of the earliest bloomers in the orchard, clothing its branches in pink buds that open to delicate white-pink blossoms. The flowers arrive before most other apples have even thought about blooming, creating an extended display that lasts several weeks. This vigorous tree grows with a distinctly upright habit—almost aggressively vertical in its youth. Reaching 12-15 feet high and 12-15 feet wide with glossy green foliage that darkens through summer. But here's where this variety demands your attention: it's not just an early riser, it's also the last one standing. While other apples are being harvested in September, Cripps Pink is still soaking up sun, requiring a marathon 200-day growing season from bloom to harvest. Those elongated, somewhat blocky fruits develop their signature pink blush over a golden-yellow background through late October into November, each one starred with prominent lenticels like tiny constellations.
Landscape Uses and Growing Considerations
Cripps Pink thrives in zones 6-8, though zone 6 is where it truly excels—zone 5 gardeners will get a tree, but may not get fully ripe fruit before frost crashes the party. This variety's secret weapon is its low chill hour requirement of just 400 hours, making it surprisingly well-suited to warmer climates where other apples sulk and refuse to bloom. The tree grows vigorously and benefits from pruning to spread those upright young limbs and to keep the tree manageable. Young trees produce smaller or inferior fruit, so patience is required. Quality improves significantly as the tree matures, which seems only fair for a variety that makes you wait seven months for harvest. In our opinion, she is worth the wait! Imagine all the delicious snacks, cheese boards, pies.. the possibilities are endless!
In order for the tree to bare fruit, cross-pollination is essential. This means you need another tree of another variety. Compatible pollinizers include Gala, Granny Smith, Golden Delicious, Red Delicious, and Fuji, or any flowering crabapple that blooms in early to mid-spring. Given its early bloom time, having a similarly early-flowering companion nearby is crucial.
Wildlife and Pollinator Value
Cripps Pink's early, abundant spring bloom makes it valuable for pollinators emerging from winter dormancy. Honeybees are the primary pollinators, but the flowers also attract over 40 species of wild solitary bees. The extended bloom period provides sustained nectar and pollen resources when many native plants have not yet flowered, supporting early-season bee populations critical to the broader ecosystem.
General care for any tree or shrub is easy, but like any living thing will require your attention. Please educate yourself and follow these simple rules.
