‘Doitsu’ ('Asian pear type')(also known as 'PI 228012')

A bountiful place about food bearing plants.
Post Reply
User avatar
alanmercieca
Site Admin
Posts: 150
Joined: Sun Jan 12, 2014 10:18 pm

‘Doitsu’ ('Asian pear type')(also known as 'PI 228012')

Post by alanmercieca »

‘Doitsu’ (it's pear fruit is the 'Asian pear type')(This cultivar is also known as 'PI 228012').

The quality of it's fruit is '7 out of 9'.

It's fruit is medium to large, the size does not vary much from fruit to fruit, it's fruit is roundish in shape, it's cream colored flesh is 'sweet, crispy and juicy'. The average number of seeds per fruit is '6.7 seeds'. The fruit's flesh is said to be pulpy. Harvest time is August 10 through August 25 at Davis. The texture of it's flesh is a '6 out of 9'. Pick when ripe, usually when skin turns light yellowish tan or brown. It's production is low to high. It's fruit ripens mid season.

This cultivar is not even a little self-pollinating, it requires cross pollination to have any fruit, and it has low to moderate production when paired with a majority of cultivars that flower at the right time.

'Doitsu' is best paired with 'Shinseiki' and/or with 'Tsu Li' for high production.

'Doitsu' can be paired with 'Chojuro', or Kikusui, or Seigyoku for moderate amount of production. If you pair 'Doitsu' with 'Ishiiwase', or with 'Imamura Aki', or with Nijisseiki (20th Century) then 'Doitsu' would be low production.

'Doitsu' can also fruit with cross pollination from 'Aurora', from 'Bartlett', from 'Blake's Pride', from 'Brandy', from 'Butt', from 'Flemish Beauty', from 'Gin', from 'Harrow Crisp', from 'Harrow Delight', from 'Harrow Sweet', from 'Hendre Huffcap', from 'Honeysweet', from 'Hosui', from 'Korean Giant', from 'Kumoi', from 'Moonglow', from 'Niitaka', from 'Potomac', from 'Shenandoah', from 'Shinsui', from 'Winnals Longdon', from 'Yellow Huffcap', and from 'Yoinashi'. Yet with how much production?

Number of grit stone cells is 3 out of 9, size of grit stone cells are medium, it's fruit russets everywhere, amount of russeting is 9 out of 9, it's fruit does oxidize after cut the level of oxidization is '5 out of 9', the peel's background color is 'orange', fruit skin lenticels quantity '5 out of 9', fruit skin lenticel size '3 out of 9. Highly 'Core Breakdown resistant'.

It's bloom Density is a '9 out of 9'. This cultivar has a strong resistance to 'leaf scab disease', a strong resistance to 'rust disease', a strong resistance to 'pseudomonas', a strong resistance to 'Fabraea Leafspot Disease', a strong resistance to 'black rot' yet some websites claim that it's sensitive to it?, a moderate resistance to 'blister mites', damage caused by fruit scab '1 to 2 out of 9'.

'Doitsu' trees get small to medium in size, they grow with low to medium vigor. Their trunks are small to medium in diameter; their bark is fairly smooth with greenish-brown under-color overlaid with scaling. Their branches are medium in diameter. Their flower buds are about 0.34 inches in length (8.6 mm), their width about 0.17 inches (4.4 mm). This cultivar drinks more water than the average pear tree does.

It's a cross between Nijiseiki' X 'Doetsu'. In 1948 Kikuchi stated that the 'Doitsu' cultivar originated from the 'Kanagawa' Prefecture (government district) of Japan, it was also stated that 'the Kawasaki City area' was the part of 'Kanagawa' that the 'Doitsu' chance seedling originated, but no date was given for it's discovery, yet Dr. Minoru Kajiura 'the director of the Horticultural Research Station' in Hiratsuka, Kanagawa, Japan stated that 'Doitsu' originated from the 'Niigata Prefecture' of Japan. So chances are that 'Kanagawa' was not the first place to have 'Doitsu'.

Originally cultured in the Kanto region sometime following the Meiji Restoration.

'Doitsu' is commonly grown in Alabama, it's grown in Canada.

It's a heirloom cultivar of pear, Good for USDA Hardiness zones: 4b-9?. It's a cold hardy cultivar of 'Pyrus pyrifolia'

Flowering group: 3
Post Reply