Peach Saplings
Extreme 314
Features
- β Rootstock: Carmen
- β Origin: Spain (Provedo-Caval)
- β Growth: Vigorous, high-yielding
- β Fruit: Round, bright red-burgundy
- β Flesh: Firm, juicy, aromatic
- β Taste: High sugar, low acid
- β Harvest: First week of June
- β Storage: Good (long on-tree holding)
- β Pollination: Self-fertile
- β Usage: Fresh consumption, commercial
Description
Extreme 314 Peach Sapling (Carmen rootstock) is an early-season, high-yielding variety developed by Provedo-Caval in Spain in 2003 (Don Benito, Badajoz). All our saplings are certified, true-to-type, and disease-free.
The tree shows vigorous growth and provides consistently high yields every year. With the Carmen rootstock, it develops a strong root system and adapts well to different climates and soil conditions. It has mid-season flowering with bell-shaped blossoms and blooms 1β2 days later than varieties like Rich Lady.
The fruits are round and slightly flattened, with a bright red-burgundy glossy skin. They are highly attractive and commercially valuable. The flesh is firm, juicy, and aromatic, offering an excellent high sugar and low acid balance. Fruits can remain on the tree for a long time, and due to their firmness, gradual harvesting is possible.
This variety fills the harvest gap between very early and mid-early peach varieties, providing growers with a strategic advantage.
It is self-fertile, requiring no pollinators.
Harvest time is in the first week of June, making it an early-season variety.
The tree shows vigorous growth and provides consistently high yields every year. With the Carmen rootstock, it develops a strong root system and adapts well to different climates and soil conditions. It has mid-season flowering with bell-shaped blossoms and blooms 1β2 days later than varieties like Rich Lady.
The fruits are round and slightly flattened, with a bright red-burgundy glossy skin. They are highly attractive and commercially valuable. The flesh is firm, juicy, and aromatic, offering an excellent high sugar and low acid balance. Fruits can remain on the tree for a long time, and due to their firmness, gradual harvesting is possible.
This variety fills the harvest gap between very early and mid-early peach varieties, providing growers with a strategic advantage.
It is self-fertile, requiring no pollinators.
Harvest time is in the first week of June, making it an early-season variety.



