“Orange Tree”
If you live in a hot, humid sub-tropical zone like Florida or California, you have many options for growing fruit trees. You are lucky enough to be able to support almost any type of plant as long as you prevent pests from taking over. You
should consider growing an orange tree, as these are usually easy to maintain and produce some of the most delicious fruits. The orange is one of the most popular fruits worldwide due to its sweetness, juiciness, and distinctive flavor.
The orange tree can reach up to 50 feet in height towards its later years, so you should definitely take that into account when planning. Even if you’re starting with a very small tree, plan ahead and place it in an open area so that it will have plenty of room to expand. If you make the same mistake I did, you will end up having to renovate your yard to some extreme measures, such as taking out an entire shed. Just take the necessary precautions beforehand and avoid all of this trouble.
The ideal soil for growing an orange tree would be fine sand with great drainage. The soil should be deep enough to allow for extensive root development, since the trees are known for reaching monstrous sizes and requiring lots of support from down below. If you have shallow, easily saturated soil then you should either do something to remedy it or move onto a different type of tree. It is most likely that attempting to grow an orange tree in these conditions would be disastrous.
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Categories: Fruit Tree Tags: Delicious Fruits, Distinctive Flavor, Drainage, Extreme Measures, Fifteen Years, Growing Fruit Trees, Intense Flavor, Mistake, Mutation, Necessary Precautions, Orange Tree, Orange Trees, Oranges, Pests, Rind, Root Development, Saturated Soil, Sweetness, Tropical Zone, Washington Navel
“Apple Trees”
In the past, there have been only a couple different kinds of apple trees that you could buy. But now, thanks to the wonders of genetic engineering, if you want to buy an apple tree you are able to choose between many different types of
apples and flavors. Here I will outline five different popular types of apples that you can consider for your first apple tree.
First introduced in Japan, the Fuji apple has been around since 1962. The Fuji apple has yellow-green skin with red streaks down the side. The inside is delicious and sweet. It is white, firm, crunchy, and very flavorful. It becomes ripe in the middle of September, but tastes the best if it is left to fully mature until October or November.
These apples will start growing early and grow in abundance. They are good for pollinating other apples. The Fuji tree can tolerate wet, dry, or poor soil, but the fruit quality will most likely reflect the quality of the soil. The apples always taste the best when they are fresh, and are great for cooking.
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Categories: Fruit Tree Tags: Abundance, Apple Tree, Apple Trees, Brae Burn, Crisp, Crunchy, Different Kinds, Different Types Of Apples, First Apple, Flavors, Fruit Quality, Fuji Apple, Gala Apples, Genetic Engineering, Green Skin, Many Different Types, Poor Soil, Quot, Red Streaks, Types Of Apples, Yellow Skin
“Cherry Tree”
One of the most pleasant trees you can possibly maintain is a cherry tree. The word Cherry is derived from the name of an ancient city in Turkey. It describes both the tree and the fruit it produces. A cherry fruit is classified as a “drupe”.
In the center it has a single hard core that holds the seed. The outside of the fruit is smooth and might have a small groove down one side. There are hundreds of different varieties of cherry.
There are two main groups that cherries can fall under. It is either a wild cherry or a sour cherry. Wild cherries are generally used for plain eating, and originated in Europe or western Asia. Usually if you buy a bag of cherries from the store, you can guess that they are wild cherries. The other type, sour cherries, also originated in Europe and western Asia. These are less pleasant to eat, and are used more in cooking situations, including the production of jam or jelly.
Cherry trees aren’t just known for their delicious fruits. They are also popular for their beautiful flowers or blossoms. The clusters of flowers that appear in the spring are rather breathtaking, and have inspired many a song or poem.
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Categories: Fruit Tree Tags: Beautiful Flowers, Black Cherries, Blossoms, Caterpillars, Cherry Fruit, Cherry Tree, Cherry Trees, Clumps, Deep Purple, Delicious Fruits, Drupe, Negative Aspects, Plum, Purple Flowers, Sour Cherries, Stain Concrete, Tallest Tree, Types Of Trees, Western Asia, Wild Cherries, Wild Cherry
“Fruit Trees Diseases Preventing”
If you maintain any pitted fruit trees such as plums, peaches, or cherries, I’m sure you know that those types of trees are much more susceptible to diseases than any other type. While the fruits are delicious, it can be rather hard to live with all
of the maladies that can plague the life of everyone who has ever grown one of those types of fruit trees.
The main disease that you will hear about the most is known as “Brown Rot”. This is a fungus that attaches to many of the leftover fruits after the picking season is over. Not only does it look disgusting on the leftover fruits, but it also can come back on the newer fruits, rendering them inedible (unless you enjoy eating fungus).
To prevent this malady, you should prune your trees often to encourage good air circulation. Buildups of moisture are the main cause of the brown rot. Also when you are done picking for the season, you should get rid of all of the leftover fruits in the tree or on the ground.
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Categories: Fruit Tree Tags: Air Circulation, Black Knot, Brown Rot, Callus, Cankers, Cherries, Cytospora Canker, Fruit Trees, Fruit Trees Diseases Preventing, Fungus, Gardening Stores, Harder Time, Maladies, Malady, Mulch, Pathogen, Peaches, Plum Trees, Sprouts, Types Of Trees, Wound Dressings
“Fruit Tree”
When you have decided on which kind of fruit tree you would like, and where you would like it, you can finally start to plant it. If you buy your tree from a nursery, be especially careful when you are taking it from the nursery to your house.
I once had a friend who put the tree in the back of his truck, but clipped a sign on the way home. The entire tree snapped in half, and my friend was left a very sad man.
When you have gotten your tree safely back to your yard, look at the bottom of it and see how big the clump of roots is. It may seem like a lot of work now, but you want to dig a hole that is twice as wide as the clump, and just a little less deep. Making the hole slightly bigger than the clump of roots allows there to be room for the soil that you dug out to be put back in.
Otherwise you would be stuck with a giant heap of unwanted dirt, and nowhere to put it. After you have dug the hole, line the hole with some compost or fertilizer so that the tree will grow better. After you have done this you should set your fruit tree into the hole, and spread the roots out evenly so that the tree will be strong and stable.
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Categories: Fruit Tree Tags: Clump, Compost, Couple Inches, Fertilizer, Fruit Tree, Giant Heap, Lot, Piles, Roots, Rope, Sad Man, Soil, Tree Fruit, Tree Nursery, Tree Stake, Unwanted Dirt, Weather
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