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Prunus armeniaca ‘Early Golden’ (Apricot)

Early Golden Apricot, Golden Apricot, Apricot, Common Apricot, Armenian Plum, Armeniaca vulgaris, Armeniaca armeniaca

Prunus armeniaca 'Early Golden', Apricot 'Early Golden', Early Golden Apricot, Flowering Tree, Fruit Tree
Prunus armeniaca 'Early Golden', Apricot 'Early Golden', Early Golden Apricot, Flowering Tree, Fruit Tree

Apricot ‘Early Golden’: Early Ripening, Sunshine Flavor, Reliable Yields

Quick Facts – Prunus armeniaca ‘Early Golden’

Early Golden apricot on a branch

Summary: ‘Early Golden’ is a time-tested apricot prized for its dependable crops and rich, classic flavor. Fruit is medium to large, glowing golden orange with a light blush, firm yet juicy, and typically freestone at full maturity. It ripens early compared with many cultivars, which makes it a favorite for fresh eating, canning, jam, and drying in regions with moderate winters.

Botanical Name Prunus armeniaca ‘Early Golden’
Family Rosaceae (Rose family)
Common Names Early Golden apricot
Fruit & Flavor Medium to large, round to slightly oval, deep golden skin with occasional red blush. Firm, juicy flesh with balanced sweetness and lively tang. Usually freestone when fully ripe. Can behave semi-cling if picked early. Excellent fresh, for canning halves, jam, and drying.
Ripening (typical) Early season to midseason. Often late June in warm zones and early to mid July in cooler areas, depending on site and spring weather.
Season and Availability Short harvest window at the start of apricot season. Check trees daily once color and aroma rise.
Chill Requirement Roughly 400–500 hours below 45°F, sometimes higher in colder districts..
Hardiness (USDA) 5 to 8, depending on rootstock and site. Flowering is early to midseason, so protect blooms from late frost.
Tree Size About 15 to 20 ft tall and wide on standard vigor. Easy to keep smaller with summer pruning and open vase training.
Pollination Self-fruitful. A second apricot that overlaps bloom can boost set and fruit size.
Sun & Exposure Full sun 6 to 8 hours or more. Favor a site with good air drainage and shelter from cold spring winds.
Soil Fertile, well-drained loam or sandy loam. pH about 6.0 to 7.5. Avoid waterlogging. Use a mound or raised bed if the clay is heavy.
Status Widely grown, reliable early harvester with classic flavor and versatile kitchen uses.
Toxicity Pits, kernels, and foliage contain amygdalin. Keep pits and prunings away from kids, pets, and livestock.
Care (Quick)
  • Site and timing: Full sun and sharp drainage. Plant bareroot in late winter to early spring. Plant container trees during mild spells.
  • Chill: Plan for 400 to 500 hours. Very warm winters can reduce bloom and set.
  • Training: Open vase with 3 to 4 scaffolds. Summer prune to keep light in and renew short fruiting spurs.
  • Water: Deep, even moisture from bloom through harvest. Avoid soggy soil.
  • Feeding: Light feeder. Compost yearly. Add modest nitrogen only if annual shoots are under 12 inches.
  • Thinning: After natural drop, space fruit 4 to 6 inches for size and to protect limbs.
  • Frost: Bloom can be early. Keep row covers handy, especially during radiational frost nights.

If you like your apricot season to start early, ‘Early Golden’ is the friendly nudge that gets the jam pot and dessert plates going first. It flowers on an early to mid schedule, then moves fast toward that deep golden color and perfume that make the whole garden smell like summer. The fruit has the classic apricot balance of honeyed sweetness and bright tang, which is why it lands in so many family canning recipes. Give the tree sunlight, drainage, and steady moisture through spring, then enjoy a reliable wave of fruit just as summer hits its stride.

The Prunus family anchors many home orchards. You know the cast. Plums, cherries, peaches, nectarines, apricots, and almonds. ‘Early Golden’ sits in that group as the early ripening, versatile apricot that keeps flavor high and schedules happy.

Prunus armeniaca 'Early Golden', Apricot 'Early Golden', Early Golden Apricot, Flowering Tree, Fruit Tree

Why Gardeners Choose ‘Early Golden’

  • Early harvest advantage: Be first to the apricot party. ‘Early Golden’ typically ripens ahead of many standards, which is ideal for short seasons or impatient snackers.
  • Reliable crops: Self-fruitful and consistent. With good thinning you get uniform, handsome fruit and fewer broken limbs.
  • All purpose kitchen star: Firm enough for canning and drying, juicy enough for fresh eating, and aromatic enough to make simple tarts sing.

Bloom, Fruit, and Bearing

  • Bloom: Early to midseason. Because flowers can open before the last frost in many climates, keep covers ready and consider planting on a gentle slope for better air drainage.
  • Fruit: Medium to large, deep golden with rosy highlights on the sun side. Flesh is firm yet melting when fully ripe with a classic apricot perfume.
  • Bearing wood: Sets on short spurs and one year shoots. Renew spurs with light summer pruning so fruiting stays close to the trunk and within easy reach.

Season by Season Look

  • Late winter to early spring: Buds swell early. Water the soil the day before a predicted freeze to store a little extra heat. Keep frost cloth and clips at the ready.
  • Spring: After fruit set, thin at marble size. Even moisture builds size and limits cracking near harvest.
  • Early to mid summer: The orchard smells like jam. Harvest when color is saturated, fragrance rises, and the shoulder near the stem springs back to a gentle press.
  • Late summer to fall: Do a light summer prune to open the canopy and keep fruiting wood active. Ease off water in late summer to help new shoots harden for winter.
  • Winter: Inspect structure after leaf drop. In cold wet regions, keep winter cuts light and do most height control in summer.

How Does ‘Early Golden’ Compare to Other Apricots

Choosing an apricot is a little like choosing a vacation. You match your climate, timing, and taste. ‘Early Golden’ shines where you want an early crop with classic flavor and you get a moderate amount of winter chill. If your site gets frequent late frosts, you may prefer a later blooming cultivar. If your climate is very warm with low chill, choose a low chill type like ‘Katy’. If you love deep, perfumed flavor in warm summer districts, ‘Blenheim (Royal)’ has a devoted following. In many backyard orchards, ‘Early Golden’ earns a spot because it does almost everything well.

Cultivar Chill (approx.) USDA Zones* Highlights & Uses
Moorpark 600-700 5-8 Classic flavor; large fruit; very early bloom – protect blossoms.
Blenheim (Royal)’ 400-500 7-9 Beloved heirloom for warm districts; perfumed and versatile.
Goldcot 800+ 5-8 Cold hardy and later blooming; firm fruit for freezing and pies.
Harcot 700-800 5-9 Canadian bred for colder springs; aromatic with good crack resistance.
‘Tomcot’ 500-600 5-8 Large, early, heavy crops; excellent fresh and dehydrated.
Tilton 600-700 5-8 Canning classic with bright, tangy halves and superb jam.
‘Katy’ 250-400 7-9 Low chill, very early, generous crops.
Chinese (Mormon)’ 500-600 5-9 Later bloom helps in frost prone regions.
Early Golden 400-500 5-8 Early, richly flavored, reliable in moderate winters. Great fresh and for preserves.

 

USDA zones and chill hours vary by rootstock and microclimate. Confirm with local extension or a trusted nursery.

Tip: In frost prone gardens, place apricots on a gentle slope or a spot with clear air drainage. Cold air sinks. Your blossoms will thank you.

Toxicity and Safety for People, Pets, and Livestock

As with other apricots, pits, kernels, leaves, and young stems contain amygdalin. Fruit flesh is safe. Always pit fruit before blending or grinding, and never crush kernels. Keep prunings and pits away from children, dogs, cats, and livestock.

Planting ‘Early Golden’: From Bareroot to First Fruit

Site and Soil Preparation

  • Light: Sun makes sugar. Aim for 6 to 8 hours or more each day.
  • Air and frost: Avoid low pockets where cold air collects. A slight slope with open exposure often works best.
  • Soil: Well drained loam or sandy loam. If clay is your reality, build a raised mound or bed and water carefully.
  • Prep: Loosen soil widely, not just in the hole. Use native soil for backfill so roots do not stall at a rich pocket.

Planting Steps

  • Timing: Plant bareroot while dormant from late winter into early spring. Plant container trees when the soil is workable and the weather is mild.
  • Hole and depth: Dig wide. Set the root crown at the original nursery depth. Keep the graft several inches above soil level.
  • Backfill: Use native soil and firm in lifts to remove air pockets.
  • Water and mulch: Drench to settle. Mulch 2 to 3 inches deep, keeping it a hand’s width away from the trunk.
  • First cut: If planting a whip, head to 24 to 36 inches and choose 3 to 4 evenly spaced primary scaffolds for an open vase.

Aftercare

  • Keep moisture steady in year one without saturating the crown.
  • Stake only where wind demands. A little movement builds a stronger trunk.
  • Feed lightly in year two if annual shoots are shorter than 12 inches. If growth is strong, rely on compost.
  • Begin summer pruning to hold size, let light in, and renew fruiting wood close to the trunk.

Care and Maintenance: Water, Feeding, Pruning, and Thinning

Water

  • Use deep, occasional irrigation that wets the root zone. Keep soil moisture even from bloom to harvest. Uneven swings can encourage cracking.
  • After harvest, taper watering to help new wood harden for winter.

Feeding

  • ‘Early Golden’ is not a heavy feeder. Yearly compost will often do the job.
  • If growth is weak, side dress with a light balanced fertilizer in early spring. If annual shoots exceed 24 inches, skip nitrogen this year.

Pruning the Open Vase

  • Select 3 to 4 well spaced scaffolds and keep the center open to sunlight and air.
  • Favor summer pruning for vigor control and sunshine. Shorten tall leaders and remove crowded upright shoots.
  • Remove dead, diseased, and crossing wood whenever seen. In cold rainy regions, do structural cuts during a dry window.

Thinning for Size and Safety

  • After the natural drop, thin clusters to one fruit every 4 to 6 inches. Small numbers equal bigger, sweeter apricots and fewer broken limbs.

Frost Protection

  • Because bloom can be early, have breathable covers ready. Anchor covers to the ground to trap radiant heat from the soil.
  • Water the soil the day before a cold night. Moist soil stores more heat than dry soil.
Bottom line: Full sun, fast drainage, and a bright open canopy. Keep vigor balanced, thin early, and protect bloom when the forecast goes sideways.

Top 3 Mistakes with ‘Early Golden’ and Fast Fixes

  • Planting in a cold sink – Early bloom suffers if cold air pools. Fix: Choose a site with air drainage or plant slightly uphill.
  • Letting the canopy close – Shade invites rot and small fruit. Fix: Summer prune and keep a sun shaft down the middle.
  • Skipping thinning – Overloaded branches snap. Fix: Thin at marble size and prop fruiting limbs on heavy years.

Can ‘Early Golden’ Grow in a Container

Yes. Choose a dwarf or semidwarf tree on a compact rootstock and plant in a 20 to 30-gallon container with excellent drainage. Remember that pots warm early in spring, which speeds bloom and can raise frost risk. Water attentively in summer. Roll under cover or throw on a frost cloth during cold snaps while flowering.

Propagation and Rootstocks

Home growers usually buy grafted trees on apricot, peach, or plum rootstocks. Your choice influences vigor, soil tolerance, and ultimate size. Grafted ‘Early Golden’ stays true to type. Seedlings vary and take longer to bear, so they are not recommended if you want predictable fruit.

Companion Plants That Play Nice

Underplant with shallow-rooted allies that support pollinators and soil life without hogging water. Chives, thyme, and borage lure bees and hoverflies. A light living mulch of white clover can improve soil biology. Keep a clean ring near the trunk so bark stays dry and visible. Marigolds and garlic are classic orchard floor companions.

Seasonal Care Calendar for ‘Early Golden’

Season Tasks
Late winter to early spring Plant bareroot, establish open vase framework, prep frost cloths, check irrigation, start aphid scouting as buds swell.
Spring Keep moisture even. Light feeding only if growth is weak. Thin at marble size. Watch for shot hole and blossom blight.
Early to mid summer Harvest by color and fragrance with slight give. Net against birds. Do a light summer prune to keep sun in the canopy.
Late summer Taper irrigation. Remove mummified fruit. Watch for twig borer flagging and prune out promptly.
Fall Refresh mulch, clean up drops, whitewash trunks where sunscald is likely.
Winter Light structural pruning during a dry window. Protect young bark from rodents.

Common Problems and How to Prevent Them

Prevent First

  • Bright, open canopies dry quickly, which discourages brown rot and shot hole.
  • Water at the soil level. Let the morning sun dry the leaves after dew.
  • Practice orchard hygiene. Remove mummies, flagging shoots, and prunings from the ground.

Likely Culprits

  • Brown rot: Blossom blight and fruit rot. Improve airflow, space fruit with thinning, and remove mummies. In high-pressure areas, follow local extension timing for bloom sprays if needed.
  • Shot hole: Purple flecks that pop into holes and small lesions on twigs. Avoid overhead irrigation and keep canopies bright.
  • Bacterial canker and gumming: Winter injury and sunscald set the stage. Whitewash trunks in high sun locations, prune in dry weather, and cut to healthy wood.
  • Peach twig borer: Flagged shoots and wormy fruit. Sanitation plus timing-based controls. Encourage beneficial insects.
  • Aphids and scale insects: Curled sticky leaves and sooty mold. Rinse undersides, prune infested shoots, encourage lady beetles and hoverflies, and use dormant oils in winter if needed.
IPM mantra: Identify clearly, act early, and lean on cultural fixes first. Sunlight and airflow beat most problems before they start.

Troubleshooting at a Glance

Symptom Likely Cause Fix
Heavy bloom, little fruit Frost at bloom, cold wet pollination window, chill mismatch Cover blossoms, add a compatible apricot nearby, confirm chill hours fit your site
Cracking or rot Uneven watering, tight clusters, brown rot pressure Keep moisture steady, thin early, prune for airflow, remove mummies
Gumming and dieback Canker, sunscald, borers Prune to healthy wood, paint trunks white where sun is intense, lower stress with mulch and even water
Curled sticky leaves Aphids and sooty mold Hose undersides, invite beneficials, use dormant oil in winter
Small fruit and broken limbs Overcropping and no thinning Thin to 4 to 6 inch spacing and prop heavy branches

Apricot harvest in shallow trays

Harvest, Storage and Kitchen Notes for ‘Early Golden’

  • When to pick: Watch for saturated golden color with rosy cheeks, a strong apricot fragrance, and a slight springiness at the stem.
  • How to pick: Lift and twist gently. Use shallow trays. Apricots bruise if you pile them deep.
  • Ripen and store: Slightly early fruit will finish at room temperature in a day or two. Once perfect, refrigerate and eat within a few days. Bring to room temperature before serving for the fullest flavor.
  • Processing notes: ‘Early Golden’ holds shape as halves in syrup or light honey brine. Aroma blooms in jam and chutney.
  • Drying: Halve and pit. Dry in a dehydrator or a very low oven. A rough guide is 6 lb fresh to 1 lb dried. Expect concentrated sweetness and vivid color.

Flavor Pairings

Apricot Nutrition at a Glance

Fresh apricots offer vitamin C, carotenoids with vitamin A activity, vitamin E, fiber, and potassium at roughly 40 to 50 kcal per 100 g. Drying concentrates nutrients and sugars to about 240 kcal per 100 g. Dried apricots are excellent trail fuel. For everyday snacks, a modest handful is plenty.

Nutrient (typical) Fresh per 100 g Dried per 100 g
Calories about 48 kcal about 240 kcal
Carbohydrate about 11 g about 63 g
Dietary fiber about 2 g about 7 g
Potassium about 260 mg about 1100 mg
Vitamin A activity present via carotenoids higher than fresh
Note: Dried apricots are nutrient-dense and sugar-dense. Perfect for hikes and sports bags. For daily nibbling, moderate portions.

Apricot jam and fresh apricots

Seeds, Kernels, and Oils

The hard pit holds a single kernel. In some cuisines, sweet kernels are used in small amounts and can be pressed for a delicate oil. Always check product grades. Cosmetic grade is for skin and hair. Culinary grade is for food. Use only food-grade oil in recipes and keep raw kernels away from pets and children.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is ‘Early Golden’ self-fertile?

Yes. ‘Early Golden’ will set a crop on its own. A second apricot that overlaps bloom can increase yields and size.

When does ‘Early Golden’ ripen?

Typically late June in warm summer regions and early to mid July in cooler areas, depending on winter chill and spring weather.

How long until ‘Early Golden’ bears fruit?

Grafted trees commonly bear in 3 to 4 years. Expect larger crops by year 5 and beyond.

What are the chill hours for ‘Early Golden’?

About 400 to 500 hours under 45°F. If your site regularly runs below that, consider a lower chill cultivar.

Does ‘Early Golden’ handle frost well?

Bloom is early to midseason, so protect flowers with covers during late cold snaps and avoid planting in frost pockets.

Can ‘Early Golden’ grow in a pot?

Yes. Choose a dwarf or semidwarf rootstock and use a 20 to 30 gallon container with excellent drainage. Protect the bloom from frost.

How do I know when to harvest?

Color and perfume come first. Then look for a slight springiness near the stem. Apricots ripen from the inside out, so do not wait for full softness everywhere.

References and Links

Updated: October 2025 • Reviewed by Gardenia Editors

Requirements

Hardiness 5 - 8
Heat Zones 2 - 8
Plant Type Fruits, Trees
Plant Family Rosaceae
Genus Apricots, Prunus - Fruit Tree
Common names Apricot
Exposure Full Sun
Season of Interest Spring (Early, Mid), Summer (Mid)
Height 15' - 20' (4.6m - 6.1m)
Spread 15' - 20' (4.6m - 6.1m)
Maintenance High
Water Needs Average
Soil Type Chalk, Loam, Sand
Soil pH Acid, Alkaline, Neutral
Soil Drainage Moist but Well-Drained
Characteristics Showy, Fruit & Berries
Attracts Bees, Birds
How Many Plants
Do I Need?
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While every effort has been made to describe these plants accurately, please keep in mind that height, bloom time, and color may differ in various climates. The description of these plants has been written based on numerous outside resources.
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Requirements

Hardiness 5 - 8
Heat Zones 2 - 8
Plant Type Fruits, Trees
Plant Family Rosaceae
Genus Apricots, Prunus - Fruit Tree
Common names Apricot
Exposure Full Sun
Season of Interest Spring (Early, Mid), Summer (Mid)
Height 15' - 20' (4.6m - 6.1m)
Spread 15' - 20' (4.6m - 6.1m)
Maintenance High
Water Needs Average
Soil Type Chalk, Loam, Sand
Soil pH Acid, Alkaline, Neutral
Soil Drainage Moist but Well-Drained
Characteristics Showy, Fruit & Berries
Attracts Bees, Birds
How Many Plants
Do I Need?
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