Is Semi dwarf the same as true dwarf? (Eureka Lemons)
7 years ago
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- 7 years ago
- 7 years ago
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best dwarf tangerine, lemon, lime & fig?
Comments (17)The ultra dwarf on flying dragon are described as slow growing perhaps getting to 10 ft if I recall correctly. Many times only up to 7-8 ft. I'm hear it can make the fruit 40% smaller not just the crop smaller. After much reading I just bought 3 in san diego at pacific tree farms. They have a 25% off going out of biz sale. They were $32 before discount. I wanted to choose trees that fruited at different times so I can have fruit all yr. I got the cara cara navel orange. dec-mar kishu dwarf mandarin oct-dec And one I may return. Its the honey tangerine. I was told it could hold fruit until july but no sorce on the internet agrees. It also has many seeds. It turns out the pixie is the one I probably want. It is seedless, holds fruit until around july and is supposed to taste great. That should just leave me fruitless from aug-sept. Any good suggestions to fill that gap :) ? I still need to find out what roosstck they use on mine. They are from durling nursery. So consider fruiting time in your decision. I didn't want just the best fruit but the best fruit at any one time of the year. 600 lbs of citrus all in jan probably wont do you alot of good. Damon...See Morewant a dwarf sour lemon - where to buy, which to get?
Comments (6)We in CA are spoiled with wide-spread availability of citrus trees. If you don't care for Meyer lemons (I don't either) I would go with a Lisbon lemon--very easy to find and the tree is pretty tough. You could also get a Eureka, another grocery-store type that is easily available and the tree is not as thorny (which you can clip off, incidentally). I personally like Lisbons best, since I have had good experiences with them and I like the shape of the tree (less leggy than Eureka); also I have read that Eurekas are not that long-lived compared to other lemons--but I can't recall the specifics, I think it was still along the lines of 20ish years... There are a few other sour lemons that we Californians can access like Italian varieties, but I think the fruits and the trees will prolly be pretty similar to Lisbons or Eurekas...There is also a Seedless Lisbon available (IMO I find most lemons very seedy and lately I have been seeing seedless lemons for sale in the grocery store), put out by Willits and Newcomb, I bought mine at Home Depot. You could get way with a semi-dwarf too--I don't find them to be particulary aggressive growers. Make sure you get a grafted tree, so that you can have a "mature" tree to fruit for you; I've never seen a non-grafted citrus tree in CA... Where in CA do you live? I live in the Bay Area and I travel a good deal in the Los Angeles area and in Sacramento, and I've never had trouble finding trees at big box retailers and local nurseries in any of those regions. I am sure that south of the Sac citrus trees are available everywhere, and I'd imagine that is true thru out CA unless you get into far northern CA or into the foothills maybe?...Do you have an Orchard Supply Hardware nearby? They carry Four winds trees throuhout the state (or so I was told) and they will special-order any type you want--for the same retail price of like 22$, no tax since it is food-producing tree...plus if you hang on to your receipt there is a lifetime guarantee on their plants, not a bad deal if you ask me. HTH....See Moreare ALL Meyer Lemons dwarf?
Comments (28)Sunworshipper: I am not sure what rootstock it is on...if any. There is no "graft' like on all of my other citrus trees...as to cold hardiness, don't worry where you are. Mine have never been protected and survived 19 degrees when it was the size yours is currently. I suffered about 33% leaf loss lst year due to the cold...4 nights in a row with temps from 23-27 and frost. Funny thing is my valenica, tangelo, grapefruit, satsuma and honey murcott showed no damage whatsoever....only the meyer lemon leaves and the thornless key lime leaves....thornless key lime was defoliated. The key lime I have is also 8 years old and huge....not supposed to live here, I know! And truth be told, I have not had fruit from it since 2008 becasue of the cold...but I have had bountiful crops from it until then....See MoreCitrus Newbie - Dwarf Improved Meyer Lemon questions
Comments (10)I'm not going to answer all those questions, but here are a few comments. First, it looks healthy. It's grafted on a reasonable length of stem, which I like. Meyers are often rooted cuttings. In this case, it seems to have been a 'T-bud' type of graft - you can see the remains of the grafting tape which held it in place. The remaining rootstock has been cut back a little above the graft and appears to have been sealed with something black. However it has started re-growing at this point. Unusual, because all nodes are usually removed when the rootstock is cut, and this prevents re-growth. Also, the rootstock growth looks exactly like Meyers, although I suppose it could be Rough Lemon or something else similar looking. Anyway, I would cut off that stub. I wouldn't worry about the crossing branches at this stage. I wouldn't repot at this time of year. You have to decide if you are going to keep the plant growing over winter at above 50F or if you are going to allow it to become dormant below. If growing it needs good light. If dormant it needs very little water and lower light. I don't think a root stimulator is needed when re-potting. But your potting medium doesn't look very free-draining to me. It should be....See MoreRelated Professionals
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