You bought an apple tree. You dug a hole, you dropped it in, you mulched it, and now you stare at the bare circle of soil around the trunk wondering whether grass should fill it. The honest answer is no. Bare soil is wasted real estate, and grass actively competes with the tree for nitrogen and water. The right answer is an apple tree guild: a designed community of nitrogen fixers, dynamic accumulators, pest deterrents, and pollinator plants growing together with the apple tree at the centre. Once it is established, a 10 by 10 foot circle around your tree feeds itself, repels most of the pests, and produces a second harvest of berries, herbs, and cut flowers alongside the apples.
This guide gives you the species list, the spacing math, the establishment timeline, and the mistakes to avoid, every recommendation tied to a university extension service, USDA NRCS data, or peer-reviewed source. If you have planted an apple tree (or you are about to), the next 1,800 words show you exactly how to turn that one tree into a productive permaculture system.
Key Takeaway
An apple tree guild is a deliberately designed plant community organised in concentric zones around a central apple tree. The inner 2 to 3 feet stays clear, the middle ring (out to about 8 feet) holds dynamic accumulators like comfrey and yarrow, and the outer ring at the drip line holds nitrogen-fixing shrubs like goumi or sea buckthorn plus pollinator plants. Done right, a mature guild reduces external fertiliser need to near zero, deters voles and codling moth without sprays, and produces a second layered harvest from the same square footage as the tree alone.
The guild concept comes from Robert Hart's Forest Gardening, the foundational 1990s text that argued a managed temperate forest of around half a hectare (1.235 acres) could feed a family of ten. Hart organised plants into seven vertical layers (canopy, sub-canopy, shrub, herbaceous, ground cover, root, vine), and a guild is simply a smaller-scale application of the same idea built around one productive tree. For the full architecture see our guide to the seven layers of a food forest.
The apple is usually the canopy or sub-canopy element depending on rootstock. Standard apples on seedling rootstock reach 20 to 25 feet tall and 40 feet across, semi-dwarfs (MM.111, MM.106, M.7a) hit 12 to 18 feet, dwarfs on M.9 reach 6 to 10 feet, and mini-dwarfs on Bud.9 stop at 5 to 6 feet. Yields scale similarly: standards produce 10 to 20 bushels (450 to 900 lb) per year at maturity, semi-dwarfs 5 to 10 bushels (225 to 450 lb), dwarfs 1 to 2 bushels (45 to 100 lb). For most homesteaders, semi-dwarf is the practical sweet spot for guild design.
Each plant in a guild earns its place by performing one or more of six ecological functions. Stack functions where you can: a single plant filling two or three roles is more valuable than two specialists, and is a core idea of permaculture design.
| Function | Best Plants for Zones 4 to 8 | What They Do | Notes |
| Nitrogen fixer (shrub) | Goumi, sea buckthorn, Siberian peashrub | Atmospheric N to soil-available N via root nodules | Sea buckthorn fixes ~179 kg N/ha/yr; check local invasive lists for peashrub |
| Nitrogen fixer (herbaceous) | White clover, red clover, hairy vetch | Living mulch, fixes N at root surface | Red clover can fix >350 kg/ha/yr in biomass |
| Dynamic accumulator | Comfrey ('Bocking 14'), yarrow, dandelion, chicory, borage | Mine deep K, P, Ca, trace minerals; release via leaf decay | Comfrey raises available K +18% in 2 years (Cornell) |
| Pest deterrent | Daffodils, chives, garlic, tansy, nasturtium | Repel or confuse voles, codling moth, aphids | Daffodils protect against vole girdling all winter |
| Pollinator attractor | Mountain mint, anise hyssop, calendula, native asters, Joe-Pye weed | Attract bees, hoverflies, parasitic wasps | Penn State trials: mountain mint and stiff goldenrod top performers |
| Mulch / ground cover | Comfrey, white clover, alyssum, strawberry | Suppress weeds, retain moisture, cool soil | Comfrey doubles as accumulator and mulch source |
Sources: Winrock on sea buckthorn, Legume Hub on red clover, Cornell Small Farms via Thrive Lot, Xerces Society pollinator lists
For a semi-dwarf apple on a 12-foot rootstock (around 15 feet wide at maturity), here is the species list and placement that homesteaders consistently report works. Plant the apple tree first. Add the inner-zone plants (daffodils, chives) in year 1. Add the dynamic accumulators (comfrey, yarrow, borage) in year 1 or 2. Add the outer-zone shrub (goumi) at the same time as the tree if space allows, or in year 2 once the tree is established.
Inner zone (0 to 3 ft from trunk): keep clear, then plant deterrents
Mulch ring 4 to 6 inches off the trunk to prevent crown rot. Plant 12 to 15 daffodil bulbs in a ring at 18 to 24 inches from the trunk in autumn before the tree's first winter, voles will not approach. Add a clump of chives at the south or east side for pollinator nectar in late spring.
Middle zone (3 to 8 ft): dynamic accumulators and herbs
Three comfrey 'Bocking 14' crowns at roughly 4 feet out (the sterile cultivar will not seed everywhere). Add 2 to 3 yarrow plants, 1 borage (will reseed itself), and a clump of dill or fennel for parasitic wasp habitat. This is also where seasonal pollinator annuals (calendula, alyssum) go.
Outer zone (8 ft to drip line): nitrogen fixer + pollinator
One goumi shrub on the north side (so it does not shade the apple). Goumi reaches 8 to 12 ft and fixes nitrogen progressively as it matures. Underplant with mountain mint or anise hyssop for pollinators. White clover ground cover fills any remaining bare soil.
Beyond the drip line (optional)
If space permits, add a second nitrogen fixer (sea buckthorn for cold zones, Siberian peashrub if not regulated in your state) 6 to 10 ft beyond the drip line. This builds the food forest outward and provides berry yields as a bonus. See our guide to berry bushes for the shrub layer for additional options.
Why This Works: Stacking Functions and Edge Effect
Two permaculture principles do most of the heavy lifting in a guild. Stacking functions means each plant earns its keep by serving multiple roles, comfrey accumulates nutrients, produces mulch biomass, and attracts pollinators in one plant. Edge effect means the boundary zone where two systems meet (here, the drip line where canopy meets open sun) is the most productive zone, which is why the goumi and pollinator plants live there. The guild works because it is biologically diverse, not because it follows a magic recipe. Substitute species freely as long as each functional role is filled.
Apple roots typically extend two to four times beyond the canopy spread, with the highest density of feeder roots concentrated near the drip line. Arborists recommend a tree protection radius of 1 foot for every 1 inch of trunk diameter. So a 4-inch-trunk semi-dwarf has feeder roots 4 feet out from the trunk; you do not want competing herbaceous plants in that 4-foot circle for the first 2 to 3 years.
The mulch detail homesteaders most often get wrong: keep the mulch ring 4 to 6 inches away from the trunk itself. A "mulch volcano" piled against the bark traps moisture and promotes crown rot (Phytophthora). Apply mulch 3 to 4 inches deep extending out to the drip line, but with a clear breathing zone right around the trunk. Michigan State Extension covers this in detail.
| Zone | Distance from Trunk | What Goes Here | Why |
| Trunk-clear | 0 to 6 in | Bare soil only | Prevents crown rot from moisture |
| Inner | 6 in to 3 ft | Mulch + low ground cover (clover, alyssum), daffodil ring at 18 to 24 in | Keep tree feeder zone uncrowded; daffodils deter voles |
| Middle | 3 to 8 ft | Comfrey, yarrow, borage, chives, herbs | Dynamic accumulators with deep roots that don't compete with shallow feeders |
| Outer (drip line) | 8 to 15 ft | Goumi, mountain mint, anise hyssop, calendula | N-fixer at edge gets full sun; pollinators at canopy gap |
| Beyond drip line | 15 ft+ | Sea buckthorn, peashrub, additional pollinator beds | Extends food forest outward without crowding the apple |
Sources: DeepRoot on tree root spread, Orchard People mulch guide, UC IPM on Phytophthora crown rot
Three apple problems do most of the damage to backyard trees: codling moth, apple scab, and voles. The guild handles each one differently.
Codling moth. The larvae bore into developing apples and ruin them. Unmanaged, codling moth can destroy up to 95% of a crop, and a single female lays up to 100 eggs. Adults emerge to fly at apple bloom and again 6 to 8 weeks later. Tansy decoction sprayed on developing fruit is documented as an effective deterrent, and dill, fennel, and yarrow attract parasitic wasps that target the larvae. Pheromone traps from Penn State Extension are the standard cultural control to combine with the guild.
Apple scab. A fungal disease that needs 6 to 23 hours of leaf wetness at 42 to 75°F to infect, per Cornell IPM. The guild contributes by improving air circulation (pruning) and by raking out fallen leaves where overwintering inoculum lives. If you live in a humid climate, choose scab-resistant cultivars (Liberty, Enterprise, Goldrush, Pristine, Williams' Pride, CrimsonCrisp).
Voles. Meadow and pine voles girdle young apple trees in winter under snow cover, often killing trees outright. Penn State's vole IPM recommends a 2-foot vegetation-free zone at the trunk plus daffodil rings; daffodil bulbs contain alkaloids voles refuse to eat. Add a wire mesh trunk guard for the first 5 winters as backup.
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Send Me the Chart| Year | Plant | Action |
| Year 0 (autumn before) | Soil prep + daffodil bulbs | Test soil pH (target 6.0 to 6.8). Amend with compost. Plant daffodil ring 18 to 24 in from where trunk will go. |
| Year 1 spring | Apple tree + mulch + clover | Plant tree, mulch 3 to 4 in (kept off trunk), broadcast white clover for ground cover. |
| Year 1 late spring | Comfrey, yarrow, chives, borage | Add dynamic accumulators in middle zone. Borage will reseed itself in year 2. |
| Year 1 or 2 | Goumi or sea buckthorn | Plant nitrogen-fixing shrub at outer edge (north side to avoid shading apple). |
| Year 2 to 3 | Pollinator perennials | Mountain mint, anise hyssop, native asters at outer ring as canopy gap allows. |
| Year 4 to 6 | Begin thinning | Apple enters bearing. Reduce nitrogen-fixer biomass aggressively, excess N reduces fruit quality. |
Sources: Raintree Nursery on apple planting timing, MSU Extension on planting fruit trees, Cornell apple nutrition
Common Mistake to Avoid
Planting near a black walnut. Walnut trees produce juglone, a toxic compound that suppresses growth in apples and most guild plants. Keep apple trees and their guilds at least 50 feet from any black walnut, butternut, or English walnut, per Pacific Northwest Plant Disease Handbook.
The other four mistakes appear constantly in extension publications and homesteader debriefs:
Overplanting in year 1. A young apple tree cannot compete with a mature comfrey, yarrow, and goumi all at once. Establish the tree first; phase in companions over 2 to 3 years.
Comfrey too close to the trunk. Comfrey leaves trap moisture against the bark and contribute to crown rot. Keep all herbaceous plants at least 24 inches from the trunk.
Choosing invasive nitrogen fixers. Autumn olive (Elaeagnus umbellata) is invasive across most of the eastern US per USDA's National Invasive Species Information Center, and Siberian peashrub is restricted in Minnesota and several other states. Verify state lists before planting either.
Skipping rodent protection. Daffodils alone do not stop a hungry vole population in a hard winter. Add a wire mesh trunk guard (1/4-inch hardware cloth, 24 inches tall, buried 2 inches into soil) for the first 5 years.
For broader context on stacking species across multiple trees, see our guide on how to start a food forest step by step, and once you are sketching the layout, the food forest design mapping guide covers zone planning. The deepest reference for building a multi-tree system is the complete food forest guide. For shorter-rotation perennials to fold into the herbaceous layer, the edible perennials list is a useful companion. Finally, the companion planting fruit trees article covers pairings beyond apple.
What is a fruit tree guild?
A fruit tree guild is a designed plant community centred on a productive fruit tree, with companion plants chosen to perform six ecological roles: nitrogen fixation, dynamic nutrient accumulation, pest deterrence, pollinator attraction, ground cover, and mulch production. The concept is rooted in Robert Hart's forest gardening framework and Dave Jacke's Edible Forest Gardens, and is the smallest unit of a permaculture food forest.
What do you plant under apple trees?
The classic apple guild includes daffodils (vole deterrent) at the inner ring, comfrey, yarrow, chives, and borage in the middle zone, and goumi or sea buckthorn at the drip line. White clover provides ground cover. Add mountain mint or anise hyssop for pollinators if space permits. Avoid grass, which competes aggressively with apple for nitrogen and water.
Can you plant different fruit trees next to each other?
Yes, with caveats. Apples cross-pollinate well with crabapples and many other apple varieties (in fact, two compatible apples within 50 feet substantially improve fruit set). Apples, pears, plums, and cherries can all coexist if spaced at their mature canopy widths. Avoid placing pears within 50 feet of junipers (cedar-apple rust alternate host), and avoid all Rosaceae family trees within 50 feet of a black walnut due to juglone.
What should you not plant near apple trees?
Three categories to avoid: (1) Black walnut, butternut, and English walnut, due to juglone toxicity. (2) Cedars and junipers, alternate hosts for cedar-apple rust. (3) Aggressive grasses, especially fescue and Kentucky bluegrass, which outcompete young apples for water and nitrogen. Tomatoes and other nightshades are sometimes listed as problematic, though the evidence is weaker than for the three above.
Does an apple tree guild really work, or is it permaculture folklore?
The empirical evidence is mixed but tilts positive. The strongest support is for the individual functional components: comfrey's potassium accumulation is documented by Cornell, codling-moth-attracting parasitoid wasps are confirmed by extension entomologists, and nitrogen-fixing shrubs measurably increase soil nitrogen. The weaker claim is that any one specific recipe is universally optimal. Treat the guild as a framework rather than a fixed recipe: substitute species freely as long as each functional role is filled.
How long until an apple tree guild is fully productive?
Year 1: tree planted, low ground cover and inner-zone plants establishing. Years 2 to 3: dynamic accumulators are productive (comfrey can be harvested 6 times a year by year 2). Years 4 to 6: tree begins bearing meaningfully (semi-dwarf 5 to 10 bushels), nitrogen fixers should be cut back. Year 7+: full guild maturity, the system is largely self-sufficient for fertility, with mulch and minor pruning the main inputs.
Can I retrofit a guild around an established apple tree?
Yes, and this is one of the highest-value moves you can make on an existing homestead. Plant daffodil rings in autumn, transplant comfrey crowns at the drip line in spring, broadcast white clover into the existing turf, and add a goumi or sea buckthorn at the perimeter. Avoid disturbing the established root zone within 6 feet of the trunk; surface-plant only, mulched well.
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