You are here: Welcome to TyTy Online Plant & Pecan Tree Nursery
> Fruit Trees- Fruit Plants- Fruit Bushes > Quince Trees

Quince Trees

Welcome to TyTy Nursery, the best place on the internet to buy Quince Trees! Our Quince Trees are spectacular in landscapes of all kinds, and we can ship bearing size quince trees to you immediately during the season. Buy quince trees from TyTy Nursery today!



The flowering of a Quince tree can begin as early as March, however, the fruit usually ripens in late Fall.



The young Smyrna quince begins to develop small fruit in April and then develops rapidly into mature fruit when harvest in the Fall. Harvesting from Quince Trees at TyTy Nursery begins in October and the quince fruit will last well into December.



Buy fruit trees that are vigorous and many larger sized trees can bear fruit the first year of planting. Fruits like these: persimmon, apple, citrus, pomegranate, and quince matured delicious fruit for fall snacks on December 1, 2007. The banana tree produced a green bunch of bananas, not yet quite ripe but requiring only another week to mature a tasty sweet banana harvest.




The Orange Quince and the Pineapple Quince trees are very productive and the fragrance of the Orange quince lasts for months. The Pineapple Quince fruit has the aroma of a freshly sliced pineapple.



The Quince fruit is an ancient fruit that has been hybridized and improved hybrid quince fruit that can be purchased at grocery stores. New hybrid quince fruit tree varieties are Jumbo quince, which produces a very large fruit; the Orange quince tree and the Pineapple quince fruit has the fragrance of the corresponding fruits. Quince fruit taste is similar to apple and pear flavor. Perhaps the most desirable characteristic of the quince is its excellent quality of fragrance that can fill a room for months during the winter without refrigeration.

History of the Quince Tree


Quince is a fruit that was highly prized by ancient civilizations, and it probably originated near the antique city of Smyrna, Turkey. The fruit was widely disseminated in artistic drawings, as wall paintings and mosaics at the lost city of Pompeii, Italy, and even though the ancient Greeks had developed and grafted quince with an exceptional quality, it is only in recent years that agricultural scientists have hybridized a fruit with a softer texture and a juicier flesh.
Some modern Bible translations claim that Adam tasted in the Garden of Eden the fruit of an apple... but more likely that fruit was a quince, since apples came to the region at a much later date.
Research scientists have hybridized many new cultivars of quince that far surpass the characteristics of the wild, seedling quince trees.


From the ancient city of Smyrna, Turkey, this commercially grown hybrid is now produced for supermarkets in the Deep South where migrant Mexican works buy the fruit to satisfy their Latin palate appetites. Sometimes Smyrna trees bear fruit the very first year.
Hybrid quince cultivars are usually yellow in color when ripe; however, the new "orange" quince is orange in color. The fruit when ripe emits an agreeable fruit fragrance and can be eastern raw. The tree blooms during April in Georgia and ripens in July though September, depending on which cultivar was planted. The surface of the fruit is generally woolly like a peach except for the Smyrna, which is slick and waxy. Many jelly makers prefer to pick the fruit just before ripening, when the color begins to change from green to yellow. This seals the acid content into their jelly.
Quince hybrid cultivars grow 10 to 15 feet tall because they are grafted onto a dwarfing rootstock; however, the species, ‘Cydonia oblonga,’ has grown to 35 feet in California.  Many early settlers of the United States planted the seed of the European quince, ‘Cydonia oblonga,’ in their gardens.  Some of these seedlings produced quince fruit the size of pears, and others grew fruit to the remarkable size of a cantaloupe.  These fruits were used mainly to add a wonderful fragrance inside their rooms from the long lasting quality of the fruit.  The quince fruit was also used to make jellies, jams, pies, pastes, and pectin value to include with other canned items.  The quince trees and fruit are remarkably free of diseases and insect pests.  The trees are very adaptable to a wide range of soil types and temperatures, and readily withstand cold damage in Zones 5-9, subjected to low temperatures of negative 15 degrees Fahrenheit.  Most of the quince that is grown from seed is nationally used as a dwarfing rootstock for other fruit trees by wholesale nurserymen.


The flowers of quince trees appear in late spring after the leaves form, and the blossoms are pinkish-white with a pleasant fragrance.  After the fruit begins to turn yellow in the fall, a delicious aroma is emitted from the ripening sequence, one that is unequaled by any other fruit in terms of the long period that the fragrance lasts, and the delicate quality of the aroma.  The flowers of the quince tree are self fertile and require no cross pollination by bees and ants.  The seedling, ungrafted quince is very different from the flowering dwarf quince, even though they both produce large fruit.  Quince fruit has been shown to contain healthy minerals such as potassium, potash, and phosphorus, and is high in Vitamins C and B2.


The medicinal qualities of quince have been appreciated to be true since ancient times. Shakespeare wrote that quince was the "stomach's comforter."


Quince has many uses, such as, pies, jellies, jams, marmalades, flavorings, ice creams, and cakes.

Grafted quince trees are reliable producers of high quality fruit with little need for care or attention, and they will survive low temperatures in every state except Alaska. Try one of these collector type grafted trees for your garden.


Recommended cultivars to buy:

Hybrid Quince, Jumbo Quince, Pineapple Quince, Symrna Quince, Orange Quince


Today's Featured Products
from The Nursery at TyTy

Windmill Palm Tree


Plant and buy Windmill Palm trees

Plant and buy Windmill Palm trees

A Windmill Palm Tree will survive snow and ice of the the Northern winters even to Canada. Buy a Windmill Palm Tree for that tropical look near a pool, deck, or patio. The Windmill Palm Tree is maintenance free unlike many tropical palm tree selections. To buy or order your Windmill Palm Trees, Call: 1-800-972-2101


Needle Palm Tree


The Needle Palm Tree is very slow growing that makes it especially adaptable to icy cold temperatures in Northern states. The Needle Palm Tree grows a wide trunk and is a native palm tree to America.



To Buy or Order, Call Toll-Free 1-800-972-2101 - To order, buy, or purchase by mail, print out our Order Form

If you have any specific questions on how to buy or order bulbs, shrubs, plants, and trees at TyTy Nursery, please call us toll-free at 1-800-972-2101. It's easy to buy, order, or purchase from TyTy Nursery. Order or Buy a bulb, shrub, plant, or tree now!