Spring 2026We have now finished for this season. We re-open for reserve orders for next season from 1st June.
01759 392007

Pink Pearl rowan

£44.50 - £72.50
  • Fruit colour: Pink
  • Fruit colour: White

A small upright rowan tree with clusters of pink-flecked white fruitlets.

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Pink Pearl rowan for sale

Choose a size - pot-grown

All our pot-grown trees are grown for us to our specification by the Frank P Matthews nursery.

  • PG12-year 12L pot-grown tree, £72.50
    Large tree (3m-5m after 10 years)
    Out of stock

Choose a size - bare-root

  • BR11-year bare-root tree,£44.50
    Large tree (3m-5m after 10 years)
    Out of stock
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Need help?

Ask our fruit tree experts on 01759 392007 or fill in our contact form.

Tree specification

Photos of trees as supplied | Tree sizes and forms

Next deliveries

Order now for delivery from 26th May.

Delivery charges

Delivery for a single tree starts at £9.95, it is calculated based on your postcode.

All about Pink Pearl rowan

'Pink Pearl' is a small upright-growing rowan tree, named for its clusters of very attractive pink-flecked white fruitlets.

The leaves are highly pinnate - each leaf seems to consist of separate leaflets. They turn a purple / bronze colour in the autumn.

History

Pink Pearl was developed by Hillier Nurseries in the UK in the 1950s.


Pink Pearl characteristics

Growing

  • What level of gardening skill is needed to grow Pink Pearl?Beginner

Using

  • Food usesNot suitable for humans

Problems

  • What is the overall disease resistance of Pink Pearl?Good

Identification

  • Where does Pink Pearl originate from?United Kingdom
  • When was Pink Pearl first introduced?1950 - 1999
  • When is Pink Pearl in flower?May
  • What colour is the blossom of Pink Pearl?White
  • Fruit colourPinkWhite
  • British-grown trees

  • Trees grown in the UK.
  • Plant Healthy scheme logo

Unlike many garden centres and online retailers, the vast majority of our fruit trees are grown in the UK. Find out more.

All our trees are certified under the Plant Healthy scheme, supervised by the Plant Health Alliance. Other stakeholders include Defra and the RHS. Find out more.

Guaranteed fruit trees

When you buy your fruit tree from Orange Pippin Fruit Trees we guarantee it for the first season in your garden while it gets established. If it doesn't grow successfully, we'll either replace it the following season or offer a refund, subject to some conditions. Find out more.

More about rowan

The Rowans or Mountain Ash trees are a group of mostly small trees growing to about 5m-7m, characterised by their heavily segmented or "pinnate" leaves, which often take on attractive autumn colours. They are also known as Mountain Ash trees, because the leaf has a passing resemblance to the common ash - although they are not related.

They are however distantly related to crab-apples and hawthorns, and most varieties bear clusters of fruitlets which hang on the tree into early winter. The fruits are usually red, but there are also yellow and pink varieties. The berries of many species (especially Sorbus aucuparia) can also be cooked and made into rowan jelly, similar to crab-apple jelly.

All forms of rowan are good sources of food for wildlife from late summer into the early winter.

Rowans are easy to grow, and most are tolerant of a wide range of conditions, including acidic soils, clay soils, wet soils, and exposed situations. Many will tolerate chalk, however they prefer well-drained neutral or acidic soils if possible.

Rowans flower very late - in May or June - and often set fruit by mid-summer. This makes them particularly well-adapted to northern climates with short damp summers and cold winters.

Rowans can be grown successfully in areas with long warm summers, provided you pay attention to watering (particularly with young trees) as they do not tolerate drought.

They can be planted in most locations, but for the best fruit and leaf colours plant in full sun.

They are generally healthy trees, although (reflecting their relation with apples) they can be susceptible to fireblight - fortunately not a common disease in the UK. Scab and aphids can also sometimes be a problem.

The growth habit of most varieties is quite upright, making them good street trees.

Most of our Rowan trees are grafted on to Sorbus aucuparia rootstocks, to help give a consistent size and better tolerance to drought. Some are grafted on Sorbus intermedia which is more suitable for the Whitebeam varieties. Although they are usually just planted and allowed to grow naturally, young Sorbus trees can be cut back and shaped and pruned in a similar way to Malus and Prunus.


This variety description was produced by Orange Pippin staff from first-hand research. Last checked: 15-May-2026.

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