Happy, healthy, plants grown by experts and shipped right to your doorstep.

Grab your favorite fall plants and get another for FREE! Shop Buy One Get One FREE today!

Free Shipping On Plant Orders $99+ Use code:

REDMAPLE99

USDA Organic Liberty Apple

Malus x 'Liberty'
$82500
  • Out of stock
  • Stay Protected wtih Plant Sentry ™
Plant Size

Plant Sentry™

Plant Sentry is designed to protect both consumers and the nursery trade from invasive plant pests and diseases. Sites that display the Plant Sentry protection badge are protected from consumers buying and nurseries shipping material carrying invasive pests and diseases.

This proprietary eCommerce software prevents the shipment of a restricted plant to each state. The Plant Sentry system includes a shipment certification program. The Plant Sentry Compliance Officer works closely with NatureHills.com and each nursery or fulfillment center to ensure only compliant plants are sold to customers.

Click Here to learn more

 

Plant Sentry

Delivery and Shipping

Shipping

To obtain a more accurate shipment time-frame, simply enter your zip code in the “Find Your Growing Zone” box to the right. Our plants are grown all over the country and lead time on items may be different because of this. Once your order is placed, you will also receive the specific shipment time-frame information as part of your order confirmation. Once an item ships, you will receive shipment notification and tracking numbers, so you can follow along while your plant travels to your doorstep. We use FedEx, UPS, or USPS at our discretion.

 

Due to winter weather we have put a hold on shipping to the areas shown below in grey. You can still order now and we will ship the plant to you during an appropriate time for your zone.

*If you have found your zone already, it will be highlighted in the table below.

Standard Shipping Rates

At Nature Hills we handle, package and ship the products you order with the utmost care to ensure healthy delivery. Shipping and handling charges are calculated based on the tables below. Please note that some items include an additional handling surcharge, these will be noted on the item's product page.

From To S&H
$0 $19.99 $24.99
$20 $49.99 $29.99
$50 $69.99 $34.99
$70 $99.99 $39.99
$100 $129.99 $44.99
$130 $149.99 $48.99
$150 $150+ Approx 28%

Click here to see our full rates

Plant Highlights

USDA Organic Liberty Apple highlights at a glance!

Plant Highlights

  • Brand
    Nature Hills' Choice
  • Botanical Name
    Malus x 'Liberty'
  • Growing Zones
    4-9
  • Mature Height
    Semi-Dwarf Height: 12 - 18 feet | Standard Height: 18 - 25 feet
  • Mature Spread
    Semi-Dwarf Spread: 10 - 15 feet | Standard Spread: 15 - 18 feet
  • Sun Exposure
    Full Sun
  • Moisture
    Moderate
  • Soil
    Well Drained
  • Growth Rate
    Medium
  • Pollinator Friendly
    Yes
  • Pollinator Required
    Yes
  • Fragrant
    Yes
  • Pruning Time
    Late Winter
  • Bloom Period
    Early Spring
  • Harvest Time
    Late Season

Scrumptious USDA Organic Liberty Apple Tree!

  • Green Apples With Bright Red Blush & Stripes!
  • Bright, Sweet & Tart Flavor
  • Crisp Texture
  • Late-Season
  • Fragrant White Blooms
  • Pollinators Galore
  • Space-Saving Size for All Gardens
  • People Rave About the Taste!
  • Juicy Yellow Flesh
  • Vigorous Growth
  • Good Keeping Apple
  • Incredibly Disease Resistant Variety
  • Widely Adaptable
  • Requires Pollinator Partner: McIntosh, Yellow Transparent, Cortland & Zestar
  • ~800 Chill Hours

USDA Organic Liberty Apple (Malus x 'Liberty') is a late-season favorite is a reliable producer! It's also wonderfully disease resistant, and a great choice for low-spray backyard orchards. This apple tree hasn't been exposed to any chemicals and the flavor is there to prove that! You won't be able to resist its scrumptious apples!

The prolific fruit production of this Apple cultivar has reliable fruit set for years of healthy snacks and delicious desserts!

With juicy and crisp yellow flesh is sweet enough for great fresh eating. But, the flavor has enough complexity with just enough tart to hold its own in baking and ciders.

These trees provide a reliable harvest of medium-sized fruit with an excellent texture. A beautifully dark red blush covers most of the golden yellow background, and you'll enjoy the citrusy flavor.

The display is highly ornamental, from the wonderful spring flush of fragrant white blooms to the gorgeous gems dangling in the autumn, these are wonderful specimen plants! People are starting to get excited about fruiting plants, and USDA Organic Liberty Apple is a great choice!

How to Use USDA Organic Liberty Apple Tree In The Landscape

Liberty is a best-selling New York state apple but works for landscape across the country. This vigorous, healthy, hardy and productive hybrid makes a special impact in your yard.

Join the Edible Landscape movement and make your sunshine work for your family. It's great to know exactly how your fruit was grown, as well. Plant a mini orchard near a child's play structure. Watch the baby fruit develop from white flowers in spring through the finished harvest.

Use the sweet-tart fruit for a snack, or prep them with other late-season apples for a cobbler. Keep them, or sauce them. Create outstanding dried Liberty fruit leather, and you can decide how much sugar it needs. (Not much!)

Use Liberty as a focal point with a pollination partner. If you have space, let them grow to their full size and spread in a mulched garden bed. Ensure pollination by planting several Apple trees together. Add an early and mid-season variety with Liberty in a high-density planting. You'll be delighted with their good looks and a successive harvest of great-tasting fruit.

#ProPlantTips For Care

At least six hours of full sun is required for fruiting, but these apple trees will happily take full sunshine all day long. Place them where they will receive morning light for the best results.

Preferring loamy, enriched soil that has good organic matter. Be sure to plant your tree in well-drained soil. A generous layer of mulch helps retain soil moisture as well as insulate the root system from heat and chill.

Site your Liberty trees in an area that gets good air circulation. Soils must drain quickly after a rain event. Water carefully to establish new plants during their first season. Apply supplemental water during summer, when the fruit is developing.

While partially drought-tolerant, protect your investment by providing consistent moisture throughout the growing season.

Be sure to choose a site with great air circulation. Add Nature Hills Root Booster while planting for a life-long symbiotic relationship with the tiny feeder roots.

Prune to correct shape and reinforce the branching structure in late winter while your tree is dormant. Remove crossing branches to open up the canopy before new growth appears. Or, keep the trees as small as you like with annual pruning for size control each summer. It's easy to keep them pruned down to as small as 6 feet tall and wide. You'll have an easier harvest!

Liberty was developed with incredible natural disease resistance to powdery mildew, cedar apple rust, fireblight, and resistance to apple scab built-in, so you will not have to spray to prevent these problems from developing!

Hybridized by the Cornell University experiment station, this cold-hardy tree ripens late. Keep these apples for months with proper storage, and they'll sweeten up for you.

USDA Organic Liberty Apple Trees are a perfect mainstay variety for your homestead or Victory Garden. Order your very own USDA Organic Liberty Apple Tree today by going to NatureHills.com!

(USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Tree Frequently Asked Questions

When to Plant (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

Planting Bareroot trees as soon as you can dig a hole in spring and until hot weather, the earlier the better. Plant container Apple trees throughout the growing season with complete success - that is the benefit of container plants - to extend the planting season. Your County Agricultural Extension Office is a great resource for first and last frost dates in your area.

How to Plant (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

Dig a large hole only as deep as needed to accommodate the bareroot or container root ball, and twice as wide. Add Nature Hills Root Booster to speed root establishment. Remove the pot or bag and situate it into the hole so the top of the soil (soil line if bareroot), is level with the new location's soil being careful not to plant too deep. Water in again very well and backfill with the same soil you dug up, tamping down gently to ensure there are no air pockets.

Top off with a 3-4 inch thick layer of Arborist mulch. Consider staking your tree to keep its trunk growing straight for the first year to ensure it stands tall against strong winds and drifting snow.

When to Prune (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

Trim off any broken branches from delivery as soon as you take them out of the box. Prune and trim apple trees while dormant, in late winter or early spring, before you see new growth.

How to Prune (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

Dormant prune to:

  • Remove any double leaders or narrow crotch angles
  • Eliminate any crossing branches
  • Thin interior branching and leave the fruiting spurs and strong branches in place opening up the canopy
  • Branching at least 24-36 inches above the ground

Prune Apple trees in the summer to:

  • Control size and shape by reducing the length of longer new growth on vigorous trees
  • Remove water sprouts on the main trunk or older branches in the crown
  • Remove suckers at the base of the trunk
  • Thin fruit during heavy years on established trees

How to Care for (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

Growing an apple tree is easy when proper soil, good drainage, attention to moisture, and regular fertility are maintained. Once you've chosen an apple tree that works for your climate, in the size you need for your landscape, and its pollinator (if needed), then you've accomplished half the battle!

  • Apple trees do best in full sun and well-drained soil
  • Water your apple trees when it gets dry - especially during the fruit production stage, and drought periods to keep it stress-free
  • Use arborists' wood chips to mulch over the roots of your apples and have your soil tested to see what your soil may be lacking before adding fertilizers
  • Maintenance pruning and shaping

Apple trees will tolerate a wide range of soils, so long as water and nutrients are not limited and the pH level is adequate.

How to Fertilize (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

For the first year, water alone is most important. It is always best to get a soil test to see what your soil is lacking before adding more fertilizers. Once established, a fertilizer routine may be beneficial. We do offer some excellent slow-release organic options, applied according to the package directions.

Fruit trees need more phosphate and it's possible to apply too much nitrogen which affects the soil's pH. Test soil acidity or alkalinity using a pH Tester.

Fertilize in spring when you first see new growth emerging.

  • Don't overdo it
  • Phosphates are your friends
  • Pay attention to pH in areas with extremely high or low soil pH
  • Follow the directions

(USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Tree Pollinating Info

(USDA Organically Grown) Liberty is not self-fruiting and needs a pollinating partner. Pair with one of these varieties:

Harvest Times for (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

(USDA Organically Grown) Liberty’s are typically ready to harvest in September.

Early-Season? Mid-Season? Late-Season? The terminology can be confusing for new apple tree growers. Weather, climate and your tree determine when it's ripe.

For Apples:

  • Early-season is usually June-July
  • Mid-season can be August-September
  • Late-season can be from late September-November

The growing season consists of spring, summer, and fall, and varies with climate and weather. Areas with longer growing seasons in the warmer hardiness zones can greatly affect the harvest times for each particular apple variety grown in your area. Learn which growing zone you are in.

What Shipping Options Do You Offer?

NatureHills.com works closely with our growers and nursery professionals to ensure we ship when it is most appropriate for your area. Our goal is to deliver the hardiest plants by avoiding extreme high and low temperatures. Check out our shipping schedule for more information and to learn our wills and won'ts when it comes to shipping plants. Find your (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Tree for sale here at NatureHills.com!

 

Rootstocks Explained

Apple trees have been grafted onto different rootstocks since before the mid-1800s. Different rootstocks are used to improve the anchoring of trees, eliminate diseases, and reduce the natural mature size of the tree itself. While there are many different types of rootstock, they are all labeled as being either Dwarf, Semi-Dwarf, or Standard.

The apple descriptions, including flowering, pollination, and apple characteristics are the same whether the plant is grown on a standard rootstock or some varying dwarfing rootstock. The overall size can vary by climate and soil but the understock used is ultimately what affects the mature size.

There will be some variation in sizes but as a guide, we are suggesting the overall mature size of these apple varieties are:

Semi-Dwarf Apples

  • Height: 12-18 feet
  • Spread: 10 - 15 feet

Standard Apples

  • Height 18 - 25 feet
  • Spread: 15 - 18 feet

Remember that all fruit tree sizes can easily be altered if needed by simple pruning as the trees grow and develop.

USDA Organic Liberty Apple
Home & Garden Fulfillment Network

USDA Organic Liberty Apple

$82500

Scrumptious USDA Organic Liberty Apple Tree!

USDA Organic Liberty Apple (Malus x 'Liberty') is a late-season favorite is a reliable producer! It's also wonderfully disease resistant, and a great choice for low-spray backyard orchards. This apple tree hasn't been exposed to any chemicals and the flavor is there to prove that! You won't be able to resist its scrumptious apples!

The prolific fruit production of this Apple cultivar has reliable fruit set for years of healthy snacks and delicious desserts!

With juicy and crisp yellow flesh is sweet enough for great fresh eating. But, the flavor has enough complexity with just enough tart to hold its own in baking and ciders.

These trees provide a reliable harvest of medium-sized fruit with an excellent texture. A beautifully dark red blush covers most of the golden yellow background, and you'll enjoy the citrusy flavor.

The display is highly ornamental, from the wonderful spring flush of fragrant white blooms to the gorgeous gems dangling in the autumn, these are wonderful specimen plants! People are starting to get excited about fruiting plants, and USDA Organic Liberty Apple is a great choice!

How to Use USDA Organic Liberty Apple Tree In The Landscape

Liberty is a best-selling New York state apple but works for landscape across the country. This vigorous, healthy, hardy and productive hybrid makes a special impact in your yard.

Join the Edible Landscape movement and make your sunshine work for your family. It's great to know exactly how your fruit was grown, as well. Plant a mini orchard near a child's play structure. Watch the baby fruit develop from white flowers in spring through the finished harvest.

Use the sweet-tart fruit for a snack, or prep them with other late-season apples for a cobbler. Keep them, or sauce them. Create outstanding dried Liberty fruit leather, and you can decide how much sugar it needs. (Not much!)

Use Liberty as a focal point with a pollination partner. If you have space, let them grow to their full size and spread in a mulched garden bed. Ensure pollination by planting several Apple trees together. Add an early and mid-season variety with Liberty in a high-density planting. You'll be delighted with their good looks and a successive harvest of great-tasting fruit.

#ProPlantTips For Care

At least six hours of full sun is required for fruiting, but these apple trees will happily take full sunshine all day long. Place them where they will receive morning light for the best results.

Preferring loamy, enriched soil that has good organic matter. Be sure to plant your tree in well-drained soil. A generous layer of mulch helps retain soil moisture as well as insulate the root system from heat and chill.

Site your Liberty trees in an area that gets good air circulation. Soils must drain quickly after a rain event. Water carefully to establish new plants during their first season. Apply supplemental water during summer, when the fruit is developing.

While partially drought-tolerant, protect your investment by providing consistent moisture throughout the growing season.

Be sure to choose a site with great air circulation. Add Nature Hills Root Booster while planting for a life-long symbiotic relationship with the tiny feeder roots.

Prune to correct shape and reinforce the branching structure in late winter while your tree is dormant. Remove crossing branches to open up the canopy before new growth appears. Or, keep the trees as small as you like with annual pruning for size control each summer. It's easy to keep them pruned down to as small as 6 feet tall and wide. You'll have an easier harvest!

Liberty was developed with incredible natural disease resistance to powdery mildew, cedar apple rust, fireblight, and resistance to apple scab built-in, so you will not have to spray to prevent these problems from developing!

Hybridized by the Cornell University experiment station, this cold-hardy tree ripens late. Keep these apples for months with proper storage, and they'll sweeten up for you.

USDA Organic Liberty Apple Trees are a perfect mainstay variety for your homestead or Victory Garden. Order your very own USDA Organic Liberty Apple Tree today by going to NatureHills.com!

(USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Tree Frequently Asked Questions

When to Plant (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

Planting Bareroot trees as soon as you can dig a hole in spring and until hot weather, the earlier the better. Plant container Apple trees throughout the growing season with complete success - that is the benefit of container plants - to extend the planting season. Your County Agricultural Extension Office is a great resource for first and last frost dates in your area.

How to Plant (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

Dig a large hole only as deep as needed to accommodate the bareroot or container root ball, and twice as wide. Add Nature Hills Root Booster to speed root establishment. Remove the pot or bag and situate it into the hole so the top of the soil (soil line if bareroot), is level with the new location's soil being careful not to plant too deep. Water in again very well and backfill with the same soil you dug up, tamping down gently to ensure there are no air pockets.

Top off with a 3-4 inch thick layer of Arborist mulch. Consider staking your tree to keep its trunk growing straight for the first year to ensure it stands tall against strong winds and drifting snow.

When to Prune (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

Trim off any broken branches from delivery as soon as you take them out of the box. Prune and trim apple trees while dormant, in late winter or early spring, before you see new growth.

How to Prune (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

Dormant prune to:

  • Remove any double leaders or narrow crotch angles
  • Eliminate any crossing branches
  • Thin interior branching and leave the fruiting spurs and strong branches in place opening up the canopy
  • Branching at least 24-36 inches above the ground

Prune Apple trees in the summer to:

  • Control size and shape by reducing the length of longer new growth on vigorous trees
  • Remove water sprouts on the main trunk or older branches in the crown
  • Remove suckers at the base of the trunk
  • Thin fruit during heavy years on established trees

How to Care for (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

Growing an apple tree is easy when proper soil, good drainage, attention to moisture, and regular fertility are maintained. Once you've chosen an apple tree that works for your climate, in the size you need for your landscape, and its pollinator (if needed), then you've accomplished half the battle!

  • Apple trees do best in full sun and well-drained soil
  • Water your apple trees when it gets dry - especially during the fruit production stage, and drought periods to keep it stress-free
  • Use arborists' wood chips to mulch over the roots of your apples and have your soil tested to see what your soil may be lacking before adding fertilizers
  • Maintenance pruning and shaping

Apple trees will tolerate a wide range of soils, so long as water and nutrients are not limited and the pH level is adequate.

How to Fertilize (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

For the first year, water alone is most important. It is always best to get a soil test to see what your soil is lacking before adding more fertilizers. Once established, a fertilizer routine may be beneficial. We do offer some excellent slow-release organic options, applied according to the package directions.

Fruit trees need more phosphate and it's possible to apply too much nitrogen which affects the soil's pH. Test soil acidity or alkalinity using a pH Tester.

Fertilize in spring when you first see new growth emerging.

  • Don't overdo it
  • Phosphates are your friends
  • Pay attention to pH in areas with extremely high or low soil pH
  • Follow the directions

(USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Tree Pollinating Info

(USDA Organically Grown) Liberty is not self-fruiting and needs a pollinating partner. Pair with one of these varieties:

Harvest Times for (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Trees

(USDA Organically Grown) Liberty’s are typically ready to harvest in September.

Early-Season? Mid-Season? Late-Season? The terminology can be confusing for new apple tree growers. Weather, climate and your tree determine when it's ripe.

For Apples:

  • Early-season is usually June-July
  • Mid-season can be August-September
  • Late-season can be from late September-November

The growing season consists of spring, summer, and fall, and varies with climate and weather. Areas with longer growing seasons in the warmer hardiness zones can greatly affect the harvest times for each particular apple variety grown in your area. Learn which growing zone you are in.

What Shipping Options Do You Offer?

NatureHills.com works closely with our growers and nursery professionals to ensure we ship when it is most appropriate for your area. Our goal is to deliver the hardiest plants by avoiding extreme high and low temperatures. Check out our shipping schedule for more information and to learn our wills and won'ts when it comes to shipping plants. Find your (USDA Organically Grown) Liberty Apple Tree for sale here at NatureHills.com!

 

Rootstocks Explained

Apple trees have been grafted onto different rootstocks since before the mid-1800s. Different rootstocks are used to improve the anchoring of trees, eliminate diseases, and reduce the natural mature size of the tree itself. While there are many different types of rootstock, they are all labeled as being either Dwarf, Semi-Dwarf, or Standard.

The apple descriptions, including flowering, pollination, and apple characteristics are the same whether the plant is grown on a standard rootstock or some varying dwarfing rootstock. The overall size can vary by climate and soil but the understock used is ultimately what affects the mature size.

There will be some variation in sizes but as a guide, we are suggesting the overall mature size of these apple varieties are:

Semi-Dwarf Apples

  • Height: 12-18 feet
  • Spread: 10 - 15 feet

Standard Apples

  • Height 18 - 25 feet
  • Spread: 15 - 18 feet

Remember that all fruit tree sizes can easily be altered if needed by simple pruning as the trees grow and develop.

Plant Size

  • B&B (Balled & Burlapped) 8-10 Feet
View product

Find Your Garden's Growing Zone!

Error, Unable to locate a growing zone for that ZIP code.

When ordering a tree or plant, make sure to know your planting zone.

You can determine your garden’s USDA hardiness zone by entering your Zip Code below.

{"statementLink":"","footerHtml":"","hideMobile":false,"hideTrigger":false,"disableBgProcess":false,"language":"en","position":"left","leadColor":"#146ff8","triggerColor":"#146ff8","triggerRadius":"50%","triggerPositionX":"right","triggerPositionY":"bottom","triggerIcon":"people","triggerSize":"medium","triggerOffsetX":20,"triggerOffsetY":20,"mobile":{"triggerSize":"small","triggerPositionX":"right","triggerPositionY":"bottom","triggerOffsetX":10,"triggerOffsetY":10,"triggerRadius":"50%"}}