Origin & discovery
Novajo was discovered as a natural “bud sport” mutation on a Jonagold tree and then propagated by grafting.
The Belgian story
Novajo was discovered by H. Veulemans in Glabbeek, Belgium in 1985. The selection was made because the mutated branch produced apples with a stronger, earlier and more attractive red coloration than standard Jonagold.
A spontaneous genetic change affecting one branch. Growers keep it by grafting that branch.
Fruit profile
Large fruit, firm flesh, classic Jonagold sweetness with balanced acidity.
| Size | Large to very large |
| Skin | Dark red blush on a green/yellow background |
| Flesh | Creamy white to yellow-white, firm and juicy |
| Flavour | Sweet with balanced acidity (classic Jonagold style) |
| Colouring | High colour; often colours earlier than standard Jonagold |
Note: the exact colour intensity can depend on orchard site, pruning, crop load, and temperature differences.
Tree & cultivation
Vigour changes over time; mid-season bloom; requires pollinators.
Growth & productivity
- Vigour: strong in early years, then more moderate with a spreading habit.
- Productivity: early and regular with good yields.
- Bloom: mid-season.
Novajo (like Jonagold) is triploid and has low-quality pollen, so orchard designs usually require compatible pollinator trees.
Harvest & storage
Late September to late October harvest window; storage depends on technique.
| Picking period | End of September → end of October (site dependent) |
| Storage (typical trade claim) | Often marketed as keeping to June |
| Storage (CA / modern storage) | Can be available up to end of July in some supply chains |
Storage outcomes depend on maturity at harvest, cooling speed, CA settings, and supply chain handling.
Novajo vs standard Jonagold
The main differentiator is colour intensity and market appearance.
- More intense red blush and often earlier colouring
- Stronger shelf appeal in modern fruit retail
- Classic Jonagold eating quality: sweet, aromatic, balanced acidity
- Good long storage potential (depending on technique)
Photo gallery
Publicly available photos of Novajo, shown with credits to the original sources.
Licensing note: these images remain copyrighted by their owners. If you plan commercial re-use, request permission or replace them with your own photos.
Sources
Publicly available reference pages used for the facts above.
- Boomkwekerij C. van Diepen — Jonagold Novajo
- Carolus Trees — Jonagold Novajo
- HealthyFruit.be — Novajo (Dutch)
- Pomiferous — Jonagold Novajo (synonym & colouring note)
- Nicolai (FR) — Jonagold Novajo (storage claim / description)
Note: horticultural details (e.g., storage to June/July) vary by storage method (regular cold vs CA) and region.