you are professional ... you are the master of fruits trees.. many thank .. .great stuff ... I like to see your videos always learn ... I have learned , I would say I learned many new things from watching your video... good job Daleysfr. many thanks
That was a fantastic video, very informative and interesting! Thank you for making that! and you did such a good job with the presenting and editing. good work.
Hi, which is the fastest growing citrus seed for tree in pot? Any type can be grafted in the citrus family with each other? For example can i graft onto a store bought lemon tree seedling a calamomdin branch? Then the calamomdin will be a big tree not dwarf because of the root vigor of the lemon seed? Thanks Adam
Sounds like you sprouted a lemon seed and want to graft onto it. You would be able to graft other citrus scion onto your seed grown lemon. The results, as far as size goes, will be a gamble since no one knows what characteristics your specific individual seed has. The type of root stock selected by nursery's have been tested and evaluated and selected for their beneficial characteristics, ability to deal with soil types, pests and also for the size they allow the grafted tree to grow to. These have been selected from literally hundreds of thousands (maybe millions) of seeds that were grown and evaluated over the many years of citrus cultivation. But what you are interested in is size. So there are; ultra-dwarf, dwarf, semi-dwarf and standard rootstocks which they select from. Each allowing the scion to grow to a certain size. Me personally , I only buy and plant trees on Standard rootstock due to the vigor and moisture seeking ability of the standard rootstock. I have planted trees on other "dwarfing" rootstocks and I find I have to water them very frequently which is not always possible or convenient. While the "standard" rootstock trees do not miss my absence or long periods of no water or brutal heatwaves, they are just stronger and healthier. As far the size, I cut and prune to keep them down to the size I want. I say go ahead and graft onto your lemon seedling. Have fun with it! :)
Ma'am can you help me identify a fruit growing in my backyard.. It looks and smells like lemon but it's way too massive... It took around 8-9 yrs to flower.. it's the first year of fruits and I can't really identify it
Felipe Herray, well, while just about any food you find in the markets is _genetically engineered_ via controlled breeding, to clarify if seedless lemons are _genetically modified_, many times if not always the answer is yes, like how Gatorade uses gmo seedless lemons, I'm fairly certain (but don't quote me) that there's non gmo "seedless" citrus, but when it comes to market non-organic lemons they're almost definitely gmo, not only for seedlessness, but also pesticide resistance... to pesticides we're not resistant to, and sweetness, this sweetness is also a problem that selective breeding arises, but gmo takes away the need to do all that breeding for a new food... which is bad since our sugar consumption is rising faster than our ability to adapt to it even without gmo... in the past it was easier to get all the proper nutrition from plants without overloading on sugars, oh well, that's a subject/debate for another time and forum.
HyZ No, seedlessness can easily be made without genetic modification. Seedlessness is available in nearly all the fruits and vegetables. There is no way a company or some organisation can do that. You can search in the internet about parthinocarpic fruits. In gm also it's easily doable. And since both the normal means and gm makes use of a already present gene. It'd pretty much safe. But you can go with non GMO seedlessness if you want.
you are professional ... you are the master of fruits trees.. many thank .. .great stuff ... I like to see your videos always learn ... I have learned , I would say I learned many new things from watching your video... good job Daleysfr. many thanks
Thanks for sharing. Have recently started growing citrus in pots here in Malaysia.
That was a fantastic video, very informative and interesting! Thank you for making that! and you did such a good job with the presenting and editing. good work.
Watching in 2021.
Awesome video! 😁👍
Nice video ma'm.. Love from India..
What varoeties u have collected .. i have flicks yellow
Love it thank you for sharing.
I'd love a ponderosa lemon treem the fruits are enormous
are there any seedless lemon varieties?
Very informative
Hi, which is the fastest growing citrus seed for tree in pot? Any type can be grafted in the citrus family with each other? For example can i graft onto a store bought lemon tree seedling a calamomdin branch? Then the calamomdin will be a big tree not dwarf because of the root vigor of the lemon seed? Thanks Adam
Sounds like you sprouted a lemon seed and want to graft onto it. You would be able to graft other citrus scion onto your seed grown lemon. The results, as far as size goes, will be a gamble since no one knows what characteristics your specific individual seed has.
The type of root stock selected by nursery's have been tested and evaluated and selected for their beneficial characteristics, ability to deal with soil types, pests and also for the size they allow the grafted tree to grow to. These have been selected from literally hundreds of thousands (maybe millions) of seeds that were grown and evaluated over the many years of citrus cultivation.
But what you are interested in is size. So there are; ultra-dwarf, dwarf, semi-dwarf and standard rootstocks which they select from. Each allowing the scion to grow to a certain size.
Me personally , I only buy and plant trees on Standard rootstock due to the vigor and moisture seeking ability of the standard rootstock. I have planted trees on other "dwarfing" rootstocks and I find I have to water them very frequently which is not always possible or convenient. While the "standard" rootstock trees do not miss my absence or long periods of no water or brutal heatwaves, they are just stronger and healthier. As far the size, I cut and prune to keep them down to the size I want.
I say go ahead and graft onto your lemon seedling. Have fun with it! :)
Ma'am can you help me identify a fruit growing in my backyard..
It looks and smells like lemon but it's way too massive... It took around 8-9 yrs to flower.. it's the first year of fruits and I can't really identify it
It probably is a citron
Bush lemons are my favourite.
good video!
fyi a navel orange has seeds .
also what do you think of finger lemons ?
are seedless fruits(lemons) GMO ?
Felipe Herray, well, while just about any food you find in the markets is _genetically engineered_ via controlled breeding, to clarify if seedless lemons are _genetically modified_, many times if not always the answer is yes, like how Gatorade uses gmo seedless lemons, I'm fairly certain (but don't quote me) that there's non gmo "seedless" citrus, but when it comes to market non-organic lemons they're almost definitely gmo, not only for seedlessness, but also pesticide resistance... to pesticides we're not resistant to, and sweetness, this sweetness is also a problem that selective breeding arises, but gmo takes away the need to do all that breeding for a new food... which is bad since our sugar consumption is rising faster than our ability to adapt to it even without gmo... in the past it was easier to get all the proper nutrition from plants without overloading on sugars, oh well, that's a subject/debate for another time and forum.
HyZ
No, seedlessness can easily be made without genetic modification. Seedlessness is available in nearly all the fruits and vegetables. There is no way a company or some organisation can do that.
You can search in the internet about parthinocarpic fruits.
In gm also it's easily doable. And since both the normal means and gm makes use of a already present gene. It'd pretty much safe. But you can go with non GMO seedlessness if you want.
Cara cara Orange 👌❤💥
👍🌟""G 😁😁 D""🌟👍