Mobile: 919-524-8878 • Tel: 919-309-2620
Sunday 10am to 4pm • Monday-Friday, 8am to 6pm • Saturday 8am to 4pm
Sunday 10am to 4pm • Monday-Friday, 8am to 6pm • Saturday 8am to 4pm
Nazo Landscaping, Inc.
Our Services: Fruit Trees
We are proud to announce that we are the largest grower of fruit trees in NC.
We now include pomegranate trees among our selection. See our Pomegranate page for some potential benefits and medicinal uses of Pomegranate.








Available fruit-bearing trees and shrubs
Pawpaws | Pears | Peaches | Plums | Apricots | Cherries | Citrus | Pomegranates | Figs | Blueberries | Persimmons | Quinces | Loquats | Olives
| Fruit | Type | Description | Pollination | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pawpaws | ||||
| Pawpaw | Asimina Triloba | The paw paw is one of the largest edible fruits indigenous to the United States. The large leaves of pawpaw trees are clustered symmetrically at the ends of the branches, giving a distinctive imbricated appearance to the tree's foliage. The fruit of the pawpaw is a large, yellowish-green to brown berry, 2–6 in" long and 1–3" broad, weighing from 0.7-18 oz, containing several brown seeds 1/2 to 1" in diameter embedded in the soft, edible fruit pulp. The conspicuous fruits begin developing after the plants flower; they are initially green, maturing by September or October to yellow or brown. When mature, the heavy fruits bend the weak branches down. | Cross pollination with another genetic variety recommended! | ![]() |
| Apples | ||||
| Apple | Red Delicious Dwarf | Dark red fruit with tender juicy flesh. Holds crispness and flavor. Good for home use. Hardy, high yielding tree. | Mid-Season Bloomer; requires another apple variety for pollination. | ![]() |
| Apple | McIntosh | Aromatic fruit with slight tangy flavor. Firm, crisp flesh ideal for eating fresh, cooking, or making cider. Ripens early. Needs pollenizer. | Mid-Season Bloomer; requires another apple variety for pollination. | ![]() |
| Apple | Granny Smith | Very large fruit with firm, tart flesh. Excellent for pies and sauce. Late ripening. Self-fruitful. | Mid-Season Bloomer; requires another apple variety for pollination. | ![]() |
| Apple | Gala | Gala apples are small and are usually red with a portion being greenish or yellow-green, vertically striped. Gala apples are fairly resistant to bruising and are sweet, grainy, with a mild flavor and a thinner skin than most apples. | Mid-Season Bloomer; requires another apple variety for pollination. | ![]() |
| Apple | Fuji | Typically large, or very large and round. One of the most popular dessert apples, Fuji has mild, sweet flavor and fine-textured, juicy yellowish flesh. Stores very well and stays crisp, both at room temperature and refrigerated. | Mid-Season Bloomer; requires another apple variety for pollination. | ![]() |
| Apple | Honeycrisp | Oblate to roundly oblate in shape. The fruit surface has shallow dimples and numerous, small lenticels (dots). It is characterized by an exceptionally crisp and juicy texture. Its flesh is cream colored and coarse. | Mid-Season Bloomer; requires another apple variety for pollination. | ![]() |
| Apple | Golden Delicious | Golden Delicious is a large, yellow skinned cultivar and very sweet to the taste. It is prone to bruising and shriveling, so it needs careful handling and storage. | Mid-Season Bloomer; Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Apple | Pink Lady | A cross between the Golden Delicious and Lady Williams apples. Unique sweet-tart flavor described as "Gala with a zing!" Pink Lady is great for eating raw and for baking. | Mid-Season Bloomer; requires another apple variety for pollination. | ![]() |
| Apple | Golden Sentinel Columnar | Very large and attractive golden-yellow apples are sweet, juicy and delicious. Ripens mid-September. | Requires another apple variety for pollination. | ![]() |
| Apple | Scarlet Sentinel Columnar | Large, delicious, greenish-yellow fruit with an attractive red blush. Dense clusters of white flowers are followed by abundant, closely spaced fruit. Very productive and disease resistant and non-branching. The most dwarfing of the Columnar varieties. | Requires another apple variety for pollination. | ![]() |
| Pears | ||||
| Pear | Keiffer Dwarf | Large, yellow fruit. Juicy flesh. Good for home use. Pick while firm; store in cool place. Hardy, vigorous tree. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Pear | Bartlett Dwarf | Large fruit with juicy, sweet and tender white flesh. Excellent for eating fresh. Ripens early fall. | Requires pollination by another pear to produce fruit. Bartlett pears are also different in that they cannot pollinate each other, but can pollinate almost all other pears. | ![]() |
| Pear | Moonglow Dwarf | Early ripening variety with sweet, mild, juicy flesh. Hardy, blight resistant. Productive. | Requires pollination by another pear to produce fruit. | ![]() |
| Pear | Ayers Dwarf | Early ripening variety with sweet, mild, juicy flesh. Hardy, blight resistant. Productive. | Requires pollination by another pear to produce fruit. | ![]() |
| Pear | Shinseiki Asian | A pear tree that produces round, yellow fruits, which are crisp, and have a very sweet and juicy white flesh. | Requires another Asian pear variety or a Bartlett for proper pollination. | ![]() |
| Peaches | ||||
| Peach | Belle of Georgia Dwarf | Ripens shortly before Elberta. A consistent, heavy producer. Showy flowers in spring. Freestone. White flesh. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Peach | Red Haven Dwarf | A round, deeply blushed freestone. Golden yellow, excellent quality flesh. Ripens early and handles well. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Peach | Elberta Dwarf | Large fruit with high quality, freestone flesh. Excellent for home use. Dwarf, self-fertile tree. Ripens in August. Yellow flesh | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Peach | Bonfire | A compact dwarf purple-leaf peach. White-fleshed fruit streaked with red ripens late. A stunning landscape specimen with showy, pink double flowers. Can be grown in a patio pot. Fruits are clingstone (seed doesn't come free from the flesh easily) and rubbery when ripe. Best for canning. Also, makes a red pie. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Peach | Flat Wonderful | Brilliant maroon foliage early, to green beginning in July. Sweet spicy fruit with a very desirable chewy texture. Yellow flesh. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Peach | Galactica | This peach is referred to as a donut peach or flat peach for its saucer like shape. It is freestone with white flesh. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Plums | ||||
| Plum | Burbank | Burbank is a natural semi-dwarf, reaching only 12-15' with a graceful spreading form. It is super-sweet, red mottled yellow in color, and has a deep yellow flesh with a very good flavor. This plum is semi-freestone, which means it partially separates from the pit. | Requires pollination by another plum to produce fuit. | ![]() |
| Plum | Santa Rosa | These trees produce an abundant harvest of sweetly flavored, dark purple fruit each year. Adaptable to most soil types. Takes up very little space, yet produces bushels of fruit. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Plum | Byron Gold | Byron Gold is yellow fleshed, yellow skinned fruit. | Requires pollination by another pear plant to produce fruit. | ![]() |
| Apricots | ||||
| Apricot | Moorpark | The Moorpark Apricot Tree is the best red apricot with a rich, luscious flavor. This large firm apricot is a favorite for eating fresh. The Moorpark Apricot Tree ripens late June to early July. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Cherries | ||||
| Cherry | Semi Dwarf Bing | Excellent fruit quality. Susceptible to rain splitting. Winter tender and spring frost tender. Yields are not high, with high cull rates. | Require pollination by another sweet cherry plant to produce fruit. | ![]() |
| Cherry | Semi Dwarf Stella | Large fruit size and high yield. Self-fertile. The first self-fertile cherry developed at the Summerland Research Station. The tree can overset resulting in small fruit size. Fruit has sweet, juicy flesh and rich flavor. | Require pollination by another sweet cherry plant to produce fruit. | ![]() |
| Cherry | Black Tartarian | Vigorous, semi-dwarf tree, the Black Tartarian is a heavy bearer of large, bright purplish-black fruit that is tender, juicy and rich. | Require pollination by another sweet cherry plant to produce fruit. | ![]() |
| Citrus | ||||
| Citrus | Lime | (Dwarf Tree) The Citrus Lime tree bears dwarf mexican limes. Heavy bearer of juicy, lemon-sized fruit in winter to early spring. Grows into a densely branched, dwarf form. Excellent container plant for patio or indoors in cold areas. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Citrus | Tangerine | (Dwarf Tree) Easily peeled, tasty red-orange fruit in winter from this dwarf evergreen tree. As a landscape specimen it offers year round glossy foliage and fragrant flowers. Produces best with heat and humidity. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Citrus | Orange | (Dwarf Tree) Excellent juice orange with fruit ripening earlier than standard Valencia orange. Fruit can remain on the tree until late summer and remain sweet. Useful dwarf form for patio containers. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Citrus | Lemon | (Dwarf Tree) This special dwarf tree produces juicy, full-size 3" in diameter lemons! Use the fruit as you would any other lemon. Great for patio containers. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Pomegranates | ||||
| Pomegranate | Russian Giant | This rare pomegranate variety was discovered growing in central Georgia, USA. Fruits of the Giant Russian are huge and can grow as big as small grapefruits! The tree makes a beautiful ornamental with brilliant orange flowers that cover the tree in spring. Cold hardy. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Pomegranate | Wonderful | The Pomegranate tree is an ornamental shrub producing fruit with a hard, leathery deep red or yellow rind. When opened the fruit exposes shimmering translucent kernels. The juicy flesh is tart-sweet and surrounds nutlike seeds that are edible and add a bit of a crunch to the overall texture. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Figs | ||||
| Fig | Brown Turkey | Medium sized, bell shaped fruits that are purplish-brown with light pink flesh. This small productive tree will produce delicious sweet figs in summer and usually a secondary crop in early Fall | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Fig | Celeste | The Celeste fig tree is a variety of fig tree known for its tolerance for cold weather. Celeste figs are small with a purple-brown color. They usually mature in June when the figs begin to droop on the tree. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Fig | LSU Purple | Medium size with purple to burgundy fruit. Good vegetative growth for a bushy, well-formed fig bush. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Fig | Texas Everbearing | Medium-large mahogany brown fruit with deep burgundy pulp. Bears young with two good crops, one ripening in May and the second beginning in late June and on thru the summer. Ideal for fresh eating or preserves. Cold hardy and well adapted to many areas. Ripens late June-August. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Fig | Hardy Chicago | A brown fig, rich and sweet. Good for potted culture. Hardy Chicago ripens its figs from August until fall frost and will have some fruit in July. Has produced as many as 100 pints of figs in one season. Does extremely well in NC! | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Blueberries | ||||
| Blueberry | Climax | Ripening early, these berries are medium to large with a dark blue color and a very good flavor. Climax has concentrated ripening with few shriveled or overripe fruit. The shrub has an open and upright habit. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Blueberry | Premier | Bumper crops are produced with the distinctive powdery blue color on the large firm berries. The flavor is excellent, and the berries store well. The plant growth is vigorous and upright. Ripens mid-late season. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Blueberry | Tifblue | Bearing mid to late season, Tifblue is a very popular and productive variety. The berries are light blue, very firm and quite flavorful. Plant growth is vigorous and upright often used for ornamental hedges. It is the most winter hardy variety. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Blueberry | Brunswick | A native to the eastern U.S., the lowbush has great promise as an ornamental groundcover growing 8-12” high and 3-4 ft wide. Profuse white blooms yield small sized light blue fruit, and the dark glossy foliage turns bright red-orange in the fall. The berries have a “wild” blueberry flavor and high antioxidant levels. Annual pruning is not necessary, but the plants yield best if 2/3 of the growth is sheared back every third year in late winter. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Blueberry | Sunshine Blue | This semi-dwarf, versatile evergreen blueberry features showy hot pink flowers that fade to white in spring, yielding large crops of delicious berries. Sunshine Blue tolerates higher pH soils better than many other blueberries and it is self-pollinating. The low chilling requirement of 150 hours makes it suitable for warmer climates, but we find it is surprisingly cold-hardy and a wonderful addition to any garden. Excellent ornamental variety. Sweet medium sized berries. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Blueberry | Dwarf Northsky | Snow-white blooms and dense, glossy green foliage appear in the spring, deep sky blue berries ripen in July, and leaves turn brilliant red in autumn. Berries are small and have that rich “wild” blueberry flavor. Yields range from one to two lbs. per bush. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Blueberry | Brigitta | Late season highbush. Loose clusters. Medium to large, light blue, firm berries. Vigorous upright bush can grow up to 6' tall. White, bell-shaped flowers in the spring. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Blueberry | Semi-Dwarf Northland | Early-Mid season highbush. Long, loose clusters. Small, round, medium, firm, dark blue berries. Wild blueberry flavor. Vigorous, moderately spreading 3-4' bush. Extremely productive. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Blueberry | Patriot Hybrid | Patriot is a new variety that produces consistent crops of very large berries that are dark blue and highly flavored. This is a lower growing, spreading shrub to about 4 ft., and is more adaptable to moister soils than other varieties. Ripens Early. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Blueberry | Duke | Early season highbush. The most outstanding early season highbush variety in terms of fruit quality and taste. Medium size, firm, light blue berries. Good color and mild flavor. Vigorous, very productive, multicaned. Upright bush will reach 4-6'. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Persimmons | ||||
| Persimmon | Hachiya | Skin is glossy, deep orange-red; flesh dark-yellow with occasional black streaks; astringent until fully ripe and soft, then sweet and rich. Seedless or with a few seeds. Midseason to late. Much used in Japan for drying. Tree vigorous, | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Persimmon | Hana Fuyu | Oblate, non-astringent and usually seedless; late-midseason; tree is small, bears regularly but yield is low; prone to premature shedding of fruit | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Persimmon | Jiro | Second to 'Fuyu' in importance in Japan; is of high quality and ships well. The fruit is colorful and the tree vigorous in Florida. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Persimmon | Fuyu | Oblate, faintly 4-sided. Skin is deep-orange; flesh light-orange; firm when ripe; non-astringent even when unripe; with few seeds or none. Keeps well | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Persimmon | Masamoto Wasa Fuyu | An earlier ripening bud sport of the Fuyu Persimmon. The tree is moderately vigorous and of medium size. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Quinces | ||||
| Quince | Dwarf Pineapple | An attractive ornamental with a large, white to pink spring flower. Its leaves are dark green with whitish undersides. Skin is golden yellow and smooth. Fruit has a slightly pineapple taste. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Quince | Dwarf Rich's | Extrememly large fruit with lemon-yellow skin. Fruit is fragrant and covered with downy hairs. Tree does well in most regions. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Loquats | ||||
| Loquat | Eriobotrya japonica | The loquat tree blooms in the fall and fruits in early spring. The fruits, in clusters of 4 to 30, are oval, rounded or pear-shaped with smooth or downy, yellow to orange, sometimes red-blushed, skin, and white, yellow or orange, succulent pulp, of sweet to subacid or acid flavor. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |
| Olives | ||||
| Olive Tree | Mission | The Mission Olive tree bears oval fruit which is used whether for green or black olive use, for pickling and also for the commercial pressing of olive oil. The tree can grow up to 40 ft. tall and the trees are cold hardy to 5 degrees F. before showing damage, but even then they will resprout. | Self-Pollinating | ![]() |


























































