Luke, thanks for sharing little Enzo in this video. He's just the sweetest boy! How he was looking at you and smiling was so precious! You and Sindy are a blessed family! Oh, and thanks for the info on growing citrus indoors, too.
Comes for the citrus tree info. Stays for the baby. OMG Luke, they’re adorable. I don’t even care about the tree anymore - would love to hear more about your newest family member.
I grew two orange trees from a lunchroom orange in my 2nd grade class garden. I continued to take care of them alongside my teacher who I’m now friends with as an adult and she, along with my great grandparents, were largely who got me interested in gardening. The cool thing was those trees continued to grow and were on stage when my class graduated high school. Being this was in ND and they were potted in gigantic pots indoors they didn’t fruit but also I didn’t know much about growing things indoors. Also other people took over the care of them so although they seemed to remain healthy for years after I graduated they probably didn’t get all of the necessary nutrients and definitely didn’t get the amount of sunlight needed indoors in ND. Supplemental grow lights or a permanent home in a heated greenhouse would have been ideal but neither I nor the school had the resources for that unfortunately. After this video I would like to try growing citrus fruit plants indoors again even though they are a bit more labor intensive.
@@Grauenwolf yeah I’ve learned a fair bit about growing plants since I was in 2nd grade, still not knowledgeable on citrus fruits but I do know that with most fruit trees grafted trees on a healthy rootstock are going to be better off, also the variety that you plant from a seed isn’t necessarily the variety that came from the parent tree, and that some trees need a pollination partner of a different variety and without any pollinators hand pollination will be necessary unless the tree is self fruiting.
@@operator1192 you are correct no commercially grown citrus fruit comes from trees that were planted by seeds. They’re all grafted, because the seeds that come from the fruit do not produce trees that are similar to the actual one that it came off of either in shape, size appearance, or anything a lot of times, they won’t even produce fruit no matter what so other than this nice little tree, yes, growing citrus from seeds collected from grocery store fruit could produce nothing again other than a nice tree lol I still like it
@@brandonsmith3447 the fragrance was always nice and they were nice looking so that’s a bonus too. Having since grown a lot of apple trees and various bush fruits it seems like most time grafting is the way to go because the seeds don’t have the exact same genetic makeup and characteristics of fruit as the tree/bush that they came from
After growing citrus for over 5 years outdoors in AZ, I would recommend these tips for indoor growing: 1: Topping your citrus tree. Cut the top half of foliage off. Your trees will grow much more vigorously 2: For house plants I would suggest exposing your tree to wind to stimulate proper anchor root growth. Citrus don't mind a cold draft from a window as they do fine when we get into the upper 20s as a low
We have had good success with cactus and succulents mixed soil from the the big box stores. We amend with 2-3 parts cactus mix, and 1 part finished compost.
i started last summer to grow a lemon tree from seed. Its in a pot and yes I brought it inside over the winter. It grew a lot so far and Im glad you posted that video, to know what i should do next. thank u for your time
I have a seed started lemon bush from the grocery store and it's in it's 3 year, it's big and beautiful and 🤞 it'll produce a few lemons soon. Mr. Lemon spends his summers outdoors and his winter's in a restort 🤣. This year I saved rain water to give him all winter and so far his indoor transition has been easier than years past.
What a great idea about the rain water! I'm going to try that on my lemon tree that is also spending the winter in the indoor resort! I think plants really benefit from rainwater and I collect it too for watering!
Never heard of a bush lemon. Do you know the name of it? For lemon trees, you really want to graft a branch from a fruiting tree onto a rootstock. Those will start producing fruit almost immediately. If you start from seed, you might get lucky and have something to harvest in year 7 or 8, but you also might be waiting until the tree is 45 years old. Typically, citrus trees started from seed will outlive the planter before they begin bearing fruit.
@@timjohnson3913 It's just a random lemon I picked up from a grocery store lemon, they mainly sell Myer It's It's likely from a grafted tree. I call it a bush because it's far more bush shaped than it is tree shaped. I wasn't really concerned with the fruit upon starting this project I just wanted to see how growing a seed from a grocery store lemon would work out, even if it never produces a single fruit I really enjoy having it.
@@oldbear6813 The Meyer lemon was 100% from a grafted tree, but since you have started it from seed instead of getting a Meyer lemon graft, your tree will have different genetics (i.e. kids have different genes from their parents). If it eventually does produce fruit, it might be very unproductive, fruit may taste bad, etc. It is definitely special to start something from seed, but wouldn’t it better to have a tree producing amazing Meyer lemons in possibly year 2 and definitely by year 3?
@@timjohnson3913 Maybe for some people, I knew what I was getting into before starting this venture 😉 For all I know it could have a lime root stalk as a parent 🤷♀️.
Thanks Luke! Enzo is a great sidekick! What a sweetie!🥰 I ordered a pomegranate tree from Fast Growing Trees. I'm excited for when they have them back in stock and happy to hear you endorsement of them!👍 Blessings 💚
Oh my gosh, Enzo is TOO adorable! Thanks for including Enzo in the video and congratulations on your new apprentice! I picked up a small lemon plant in FL this summer. I left it outdoors until right before the 1st frost. So far it's doing well and growing!
I watched and rewatched the beginning where you say "Enzo" , hse giggles and you say in UT baby voice, "yeah" .. So cute. More Enzo in your video. He's adorable.
Fantastic explanation. I have a 2 year old indoor Lemon Tree that has lost many leaves but it is still alive & is now flowering. Now I know what to do. Thank you Luke.
This is great information but confused with the soil and fertilization part. I have to rewind and note it down. So much great info… thank you. Adore the assistant… what a cutie pie ❤
Wow what a beautiful baby. He's so calm and pleasant and surely lives his dad. I love to see babies smile and get excited. Thank upi for the info about growing lemons. I have a little lime tree that I started from seed and it seems to be growing fine. Hopefully it'll grow to maturity sooner than later. 😊
I started an experiment, my seedless mandrin orange had seeds it's two years old. Last year I took a hand full of lemons seeds from the ice. Had 5 sprout one made it. I have lunch with tropical hibiscus from seed. Keeps me busy. When weather warms up I take them outside. Enjoy your tips I'm 3 years growing now.
Omg 😱 ❤️ I’m sorry but everything you said went right over my head as I was just in love with your beautiful boy! He is just adorable 🥰 what a happy little fella
TWO QUESTIONS: 1. Will my lime tree benefit from coffee grounds? 2. How do you filter the water in the house so the water for irrigating our plants don’t have chlorine? Thank you so much! We are about to buy your guide/book. May God bless you and your beautiful family!
Always love your ideas and this is a must do and keeper. Omgosh such a sweet angel there. Just so cute seeing that excitement everytime you looked over there- big Ole smiles and feet just kicking away with joy.....melts the heart
I’m like the others in saying your apprentice totally upstaged you. Lol What an absolute angel baby. That smile. ♥️♥️♥️ I have two Meyer lemons for Mother’s Day. Moved them inside for the winter. They are growing like crazy and have two lemons growing. Many flowers. 🎉
Mines is dropping flowers and the ones left look like it needs magnesium or iron and zinc I sprayed with Epsom salt and then with a micro fertilizer but she's not looking good I paid 65$ for her so I really don't want to lose her any advice
@@charliewilliams8794 if it’s root bound or outgrowing the pot it’s in, then definitely repot it. If not, maybe just some sunshine, semi dry soil, and all I put on mine is a little miracle grow granules every other week. Hopefully it will respond now that the weather is warming up.
@@apiecemaker1163 mines is in the house with grow lights last year it was outside got so many gnats and just stayed yellow the whole summer. Because I'm in zone 7 I have to bring it in the house but it stayed so wet and was full of gnats so I thought I'd try to keep it inside by the back sliding glass doors with a grow light. I was thinking of keeping it in the house so I wouldn't be taking bugs in and out the house by bringing it in and out. Thanks for the advice though I'll just feed it some m grow every two wks as you said.
An encouraging video for me since my husband and I use so many lemons and we live in the south, but do have cold temps in the winter. That is, too cold to leave citrus outside. Thank you for giving me permission😉😂to try this! ~~Lisa
OMG Enzo stole the show!!!☺️ I have a Lemon tree outdoors in FL and the Deer in the area love it too and seem to strip the buds when they’re sprouting!
Ok. I had to watch this twice. The second time I had to just listen & not watch because Enzo is just absolutely too cute to focus on anything you were saying! Gob bless that little man with the big smiles! I brought my citrus tree from AZ to IL. I’m excited to give it a shot and try this out here. Thank you for the info. I didn’t think to feed my soil now in January. It is in a pot btw
Beautiful baby :) I love growing citrus indoors, but since I'm living in Quebec (zone 5), this is the time of year they look their worse. Can't wait for the warm and sunny days and take them outside!
How big are they and how big are the pots? Are they hard to get in and out of doors? I'm in VT, also zone 5), and received a small lemon tree as a gift so just beginning to learn about all this after moving here from California....
I’ve experimented growing citrus indoors (Valentina)and I’ve been puzzling about leaf drop which have killed two of my citrus. I’ve found out that dry air is the worst! This winter I had a humidifier pointed at it 45-50% and temperature between 15-20C. It did amazing and has bloomed with cherry size oranges! Humid air seemed to be the trick. Hope this helps you.
Such a cutie! I tried growing meyer lemon trees this year and it was an epic fail. My lime tree however is hanging in there and looking healthy. I will amend the soil tomorrow with the epson salt since it's my watering day. Thanks Luke
I would love to share my group on face book. Growing citrus in containers. Luke has alot of great info, but some will only be good for the summer months and not year around. I love this channel. Been watching for years.
Hi Luke! Ok, I get the reason behind taking off the buds because of all the energy they demand. My question is: for how long do you do remove buds? A certain number of weeks, months? The whole first year? I'm so glad you did this video. Someday soon I'd very much like to grow a lemon tree inside. Thanks!
@@Grauenwolf If I start any fruit trees outside, I'll be watching a lot of videos and reading a lot about them. It would only be a few trees, but I want to do it right. Sorry about your peaches. I hope your tree rebounds.
Oh my the baby was just to cute and you can tell he loves some daddy he just smiled and laugh I loved it. I forgot all about I needed help with my lemon tree
I used to live in the Central Valley in California, specifically Stockton, and that area has an unusual (for CA) soil history. Before the levees were built, for probably hundreds of years it used to flood a LOT every year, which brought many nutrients down from the mountains, etc. So the soil there is very rich, not at all dry. I planted a Lemon tree in my back yard which grew beautifully (like everything else pretty much) without hardly any help from me at all. I barely pruned or watered it and never fed it, but it grew tall and wide and produced amazing and abundant lemons. Again, the soil did drain but it was not overly porous, and it was jam packed full of organic matter. It received lots of sun (except in winter) but not a huge amount of rain. This Lemon tree got watered occasionally but not often and it thrived in the rich soil. I miss it and those lemons! (I"m now living in VT.)
I was happy to see this video focusing on indoor citrus. Like you, I get my plants from Fast Growing Trees. They have great stock and great customer service.
I started watching your video and thought I should tell you that I quit listening to you as soon as your baby came on the screen!!😂. But I will try again, I promise! What a great apprentice you have!
Oh cool !!! Love it!!! I grew up in Southern California in the citrus capital of the world… Corona, CA, Where the Sunkist factory used to be. The soil is slightly clay, and it’s been worked till it’s arid. The citrus in my town, grew very well without a lot of amending. ❌⭕️♥️
The sandy soil in Florida makes their citrus juicier than California citrus. Clay soils aren't as porous as sand, so Florida trees can pull more water out of the soil than California trees.
Enzo is ADORABLE!!! I have the worst luck w/citrus. I'm on my 3rd one and it's not doing well. I think it's the lighting. Not enough. I guess for growing citrus, I will live vicariously though you!
Thank you! I bought a Meyer lemon tree last year and it has been in our unheated sun room, with windows that i keep open during the summer. I will be repotting this baby in the next month so your information is timely. 120 gallon pot! I would not have to repot at all.
You will kill the tree if you put it in too big a pot. Citrus like to be basically root bound, otherwise you will get root rot as there will not be enough root mass to uptake the water and dry out the soil. Every size up in pot should be about 2 inches. From a 4 inch pot to a 6 inch pot, then a 8 inch pot, etc.
Wasn't expecting happy baby apprentice🙀😄🖤 My mom cooks a lot of Lao and Thai food often calling for lime so I really hope I can do this🙏 Thanks for the encouragement 💯 Views from a zone 5B!
Have a 20 plus year old mandarin in pot, it lives in a large open north facing porch (garden in the southern hemisphere), my main problem was not watering it enough late summer to late winter when the mandarins ripen. Since that has been improved it produces 50 plus very sweet, easy peel fruit each year. There was a dwarf rooted lemon available a couple of years ago, lost the first one due to too much watering. Second one is looking healthy.
I live in zone 4 and have been growing citrus indoors and moving them outdoors in the summer for several years. Ladybugs and lady beetles eat a lot of the pests that seem to appear on indoor plants, so whenever I find one in the house in the winter I put them with my citrus. They eat scale, mealy bugs, aphids, etc.
I bought two lemon trees last summer and I had an issue with June bugs finding them and devouring leaves. It took me a few days to figure out what was eating my little trees but then I caught one in the act. Put a little bug netting over it so the bugs couldn't get to it anymore. They are doing pretty good still.
So I started a Grapefruit tree from the fruit from my mom’s back yard in Arizona 5 years ago. I started it inside as I live in Alaska. The tree is now 5’ tall and I am trying desperately to keep this tree. It’s not in a huge pot like yours and I actually left it outside in the greenhouse when it was 2 years old and forgot about it. I went out after it had frosted for several days in a row and all the tomatoes plants had fallen over it and protected it from the cold. It was happy and green and I whisked it inside the house pronto. I actually really expected this thing to die. 4 years ago I started 3 orange trees. They came from a dwarf tree out of the fruit from my mom’s backyard and I am bringing them along as well. I am researching on the best way to make them “happy” in my home. I moved them last winter into my bedroom which is the coldest room in the house in the winter and the hottest in the summer. It’s winter now so it’s about 58 degrees in that bedroom in the summer it hits 75-85 degrees. I do provide a plant light for them as well. I am watching this video to see how more I can help these plants. Since they are doing so well I want to take the best care possible for them. If you have any advice for me I would love to hear from others that have successfully raised citrus indoors.
Very interesting Luke. Thank you. I would caution against use of neem oil though. Having had mealy bugs once - brutal!! I threw out any infected plants. I did suggest to a friend to water their infected plants with nicotine water and a periodic hose and it worked for her.
So interesting, didn't know they grow SO differently than house plants, veggies or even your other fruiting crops. As mentioned, you CAN trim them down once they are been established so you can grow in reasonable sized containers (instead of just a 1xx gallons container).
I am growing a lemon tree and an orange tree in Southeast Michigan. Our best light comes through a sliding glass door in our bedroom that faces east, so I put some grow lights in over the trees. The lights are on a timer and they double as our morning alarm clock.
Thank you so much for your videos. Thanks to your tropical fruit guide I now have an almost 1 year old mango tree sapling growing in my apartment in Maine that I started from a seed I got from a store bought Kent mango.
Buy a tree that has been grafted onto a rootstock (this is what is done for all fruit trees). Don’t start from seed. The reason is you may be waiting 45+ years for the tree to begin producing fruit. And even then, the tree will have new genetics, which might mean the tree will be unproductive, fruit may taste poor, etc. Just spend the $30-50 for a grafted tree.
@@timjohnson3913 I am growing this tree in a pot inside in the state of Maine. I am using it as a house plant and didn’t expect to ever get fruit from it.
Great video, if you like limes you should try and grow a calamansi plant or some say tree. I have 3 in 5 gallon buckets and love it. I also keep them trimmed to a bush size. They indoor now for the Michigan winter here. Best of luck thanks for the tips in Michigan
I had to keep restarting the video because I was paying more attention to your oh-so-happy baby, and missing what you were saying. SO ADORABLE!!
Lol. I did the same things. Took me 3 times to watch and really listen haha
Same! 😆
I am a new grandma and honestly your son was my favorite part of this video. I loved that he smiled at you when you talked directly to him. ❤️❤️❤️
Congratulations on joining the Grandma club and I loved this video for the same reason! :)
Me too ❤❤ adorable!!
Enzo looks at you with such loving eyes
The apprentice has a very bright future! This is awesome… thanks for sharing your wisdom with us!
Luke, thanks for sharing little Enzo in this video. He's just the sweetest boy! How he was looking at you and smiling was so precious! You and Sindy are a blessed family! Oh, and thanks for the info on growing citrus indoors, too.
EVEN BABY CAN'T WAIT TO START GROWING 🥰🥰🥰
Ok - this is the BEST video you have!! The look on his face as he looked up at his Dad was priceless!!!
Comes for the citrus tree info. Stays for the baby. OMG Luke, they’re adorable. I don’t even care about the tree anymore - would love to hear more about your newest family member.
I have no idea how you can not love on him everytime he smiles! What a cutie!!
I grew two orange trees from a lunchroom orange in my 2nd grade class garden. I continued to take care of them alongside my teacher who I’m now friends with as an adult and she, along with my great grandparents, were largely who got me interested in gardening. The cool thing was those trees continued to grow and were on stage when my class graduated high school. Being this was in ND and they were potted in gigantic pots indoors they didn’t fruit but also I didn’t know much about growing things indoors. Also other people took over the care of them so although they seemed to remain healthy for years after I graduated they probably didn’t get all of the necessary nutrients and definitely didn’t get the amount of sunlight needed indoors in ND. Supplemental grow lights or a permanent home in a heated greenhouse would have been ideal but neither I nor the school had the resources for that unfortunately. After this video I would like to try growing citrus fruit plants indoors again even though they are a bit more labor intensive.
@@Grauenwolf yeah I’ve learned a fair bit about growing plants since I was in 2nd grade, still not knowledgeable on citrus fruits but I do know that with most fruit trees grafted trees on a healthy rootstock are going to be better off, also the variety that you plant from a seed isn’t necessarily the variety that came from the parent tree, and that some trees need a pollination partner of a different variety and without any pollinators hand pollination will be necessary unless the tree is self fruiting.
@@operator1192 you are correct no commercially grown citrus fruit comes from trees that were planted by seeds. They’re all grafted, because the seeds that come from the fruit do not produce trees that are similar to the actual one that it came off of either in shape, size appearance, or anything a lot of times, they won’t even produce fruit no matter what so other than this nice little tree, yes, growing citrus from seeds collected from grocery store fruit could produce nothing again other than a nice tree lol I still like it
@@brandonsmith3447 the fragrance was always nice and they were nice looking so that’s a bonus too. Having since grown a lot of apple trees and various bush fruits it seems like most time grafting is the way to go because the seeds don’t have the exact same genetic makeup and characteristics of fruit as the tree/bush that they came from
Omg, he is the cutest thing ever! He is listening to EVERY word you’re saying!
After growing citrus for over 5 years outdoors in AZ, I would recommend these tips for indoor growing:
1: Topping your citrus tree. Cut the top half of foliage off. Your trees will grow much more vigorously
2: For house plants I would suggest exposing your tree to wind to stimulate proper anchor root growth. Citrus don't mind a cold draft from a window as they do fine when we get into the upper 20s as a low
Exactly I read that you can control size of the trees just by the pot size and pruning the trees accordingly. Then nature shall do the rest.
Most indoor citrus is going to be a dwarf variety, so pruning off the top might not be necessary
@@cinnamon9390 If you buy/get a hold of them like that then yes. Thankfully you don't have to.
That baby is beyond precious
We have had good success with cactus and succulents mixed soil from the the big box stores. We amend with 2-3 parts cactus mix, and 1 part finished compost.
OMG….Your apprentice is too darn adorable!!!💙
i started last summer to grow a lemon tree from seed. Its in a pot and yes I brought it inside over the winter. It grew a lot so far and Im glad you posted that video, to know what i should do next. thank u for your time
What an adorable baby. Have fun with Enzo.
I have a seed started lemon bush from the grocery store and it's in it's 3 year, it's big and beautiful and 🤞 it'll produce a few lemons soon. Mr. Lemon spends his summers outdoors and his winter's in a restort 🤣. This year I saved rain water to give him all winter and so far his indoor transition has been easier than years past.
What a great idea about the rain water! I'm going to try that on my lemon tree that is also spending the winter in the indoor resort! I think plants really benefit from rainwater and I collect it too for watering!
Never heard of a bush lemon. Do you know the name of it? For lemon trees, you really want to graft a branch from a fruiting tree onto a rootstock. Those will start producing fruit almost immediately. If you start from seed, you might get lucky and have something to harvest in year 7 or 8, but you also might be waiting until the tree is 45 years old. Typically, citrus trees started from seed will outlive the planter before they begin bearing fruit.
@@timjohnson3913 It's just a random lemon I picked up from a grocery store lemon, they mainly sell Myer It's It's likely from a grafted tree. I call it a bush because it's far more bush shaped than it is tree shaped. I wasn't really concerned with the fruit upon starting this project I just wanted to see how growing a seed from a grocery store lemon would work out, even if it never produces a single fruit I really enjoy having it.
@@oldbear6813 The Meyer lemon was 100% from a grafted tree, but since you have started it from seed instead of getting a Meyer lemon graft, your tree will have different genetics (i.e. kids have different genes from their parents). If it eventually does produce fruit, it might be very unproductive, fruit may taste bad, etc. It is definitely special to start something from seed, but wouldn’t it better to have a tree producing amazing Meyer lemons in possibly year 2 and definitely by year 3?
@@timjohnson3913 Maybe for some people, I knew what I was getting into before starting this venture 😉
For all I know it could have a lime root stalk as a parent 🤷♀️.
Thanks Luke!
Enzo is a great sidekick! What a sweetie!🥰
I ordered a pomegranate tree from Fast Growing Trees. I'm excited for when they have them back in stock and happy to hear you endorsement of them!👍
Blessings 💚
Oh my gosh, Enzo is TOO adorable! Thanks for including Enzo in the video and congratulations on your new apprentice!
I picked up a small lemon plant in FL this summer. I left it outdoors until right before the 1st frost. So far it's doing well and growing!
I watched and rewatched the beginning where you say "Enzo" , hse giggles and you say in UT baby voice, "yeah" .. So cute. More Enzo in your video. He's adorable.
Fantastic explanation. I have a 2 year old indoor Lemon Tree that has lost many leaves but it is still alive & is now flowering. Now I know what to do. Thank you Luke.
He wants to feel the soil what a precious boy I am sure he brightens your life
This is great information but confused with the soil and fertilization part. I have to rewind and note it down. So much great info… thank you. Adore the assistant… what a cutie pie ❤
I just got my Meyer Lemon bush in Central AR... we just moved here last January from So Cal zone 10. Your video timing is absolutely perfect!!!
My grandma grew a lemon tree from a seed and we're now in charge of it, so I hope these tips will help us:)
Wow what a beautiful baby. He's so calm and pleasant and surely lives his dad. I love to see babies smile and get excited. Thank upi for the info about growing lemons. I have a little lime tree that I started from seed and it seems to be growing fine. Hopefully it'll grow to maturity sooner than later. 😊
I started an experiment, my seedless mandrin orange had seeds it's two years old. Last year I took a hand full of lemons seeds from the ice. Had 5 sprout one made it. I have lunch with tropical hibiscus from seed. Keeps me busy. When weather warms up I take them outside. Enjoy your tips I'm 3 years growing now.
Omg 😱 ❤️ I’m sorry but everything you said went right over my head as I was just in love with your beautiful boy! He is just adorable 🥰 what a happy little fella
Hes SO adorable! You can just tell he loves his daddy!
TWO QUESTIONS: 1. Will my lime tree benefit from coffee grounds? 2. How do you filter the water in the house so the water for irrigating our plants don’t have chlorine? Thank you so much! We are about to buy your guide/book. May God bless you and your beautiful family!
Enzo was the cutest distraction EVER!!!!!
I couldn’t even pay attention to what you were saying when ever your little guy started laugh smiling! Too cute!
Always love your ideas and this is a must do and keeper. Omgosh such a sweet angel there. Just so cute seeing that excitement everytime you looked over there- big Ole smiles and feet just kicking away with joy.....melts the heart
Enzo was the star of this show for sure. What a cutie pie! Oh and I enjoyed the video too.
I’m like the others in saying your apprentice totally upstaged you. Lol What an absolute angel baby. That smile. ♥️♥️♥️ I have two Meyer lemons for Mother’s Day. Moved them inside for the winter. They are growing like crazy and have two lemons growing. Many flowers. 🎉
Mines is dropping flowers and the ones left look like it needs magnesium or iron and zinc I sprayed with Epsom salt and then with a micro fertilizer but she's not looking good I paid 65$ for her so I really don't want to lose her any advice
Should I repot her again?
@@charliewilliams8794 if it’s root bound or outgrowing the pot it’s in, then definitely repot it. If not, maybe just some sunshine, semi dry soil, and all I put on mine is a little miracle grow granules every other week. Hopefully it will respond now that the weather is warming up.
@@apiecemaker1163 mines is in the house with grow lights last year it was outside got so many gnats and just stayed yellow the whole summer. Because I'm in zone 7 I have to bring it in the house but it stayed so wet and was full of gnats so I thought I'd try to keep it inside by the back sliding glass doors with a grow light. I was thinking of keeping it in the house so I wouldn't be taking bugs in and out the house by bringing it in and out. Thanks for the advice though I'll just feed it some m grow every two wks as you said.
An encouraging video for me since my husband and I use so many lemons and we live in the south, but do have cold temps in the winter. That is, too cold to leave citrus outside. Thank you for giving me permission😉😂to try this!
~~Lisa
OMG Enzo stole the show!!!☺️
I have a Lemon tree outdoors in FL and the Deer in the area love it too and seem to strip the buds when they’re sprouting!
Ok. I had to watch this twice. The second time I had to just listen & not watch because Enzo is just absolutely too cute to focus on anything you were saying! Gob bless that little man with the big smiles! I brought my citrus tree from AZ to IL. I’m excited to give it a shot and try this out here. Thank you for the info. I didn’t think to feed my soil now in January. It is in a pot btw
Beautiful baby :) I love growing citrus indoors, but since I'm living in Quebec (zone 5), this is the time of year they look their worse. Can't wait for the warm and sunny days and take them outside!
How big are they and how big are the pots? Are they hard to get in and out of doors? I'm in VT, also zone 5), and received a small lemon tree as a gift so just beginning to learn about all this after moving here from California....
I’ve experimented growing citrus indoors (Valentina)and I’ve been puzzling about leaf drop which have killed two of my citrus. I’ve found out that dry air is the worst! This winter I had a humidifier pointed at it 45-50% and temperature between 15-20C. It did amazing and has bloomed with cherry size oranges! Humid air seemed to be the trick. Hope this helps you.
OMG Enzo is just the cutest. I kept having to rewind to hear what you were saying because he stole the show. Haha.
Amen I noticed you compared to your ago and your confidence has gone up quite a bit the videos are a lot more smooth
Such a cutie! I tried growing meyer lemon trees this year and it was an epic fail. My lime tree however is hanging in there and looking healthy. I will amend the soil tomorrow with the epson salt since it's my watering day. Thanks Luke
I lost a part of the tutorial because I was too distracted w/ Baby Enzo!!!!! OMG!!!! What a cutie ❤
OMG, he loves his Daddy! I miss the baby stage of life😭 Enjoy it Luke ❤️
I would love to share my group on face book. Growing citrus in containers. Luke has alot of great info, but some will only be good for the summer months and not year around. I love this channel. Been watching for years.
Such a cute baby I loved watching him light up and smile watching and listening to you
Such a beautiful baby!! Omg that smile! Thanks so much for the info!
I can't concentrate on your video because your baby is sooooooo amazingly cute! I love how engaged he is with your presentation!
Hi Luke! Ok, I get the reason behind taking off the buds because of all the energy they demand. My question is: for how long do you do remove buds? A certain number of weeks, months? The whole first year? I'm so glad you did this video. Someday soon I'd very much like to grow a lemon tree inside. Thanks!
@@Grauenwolf Thank you, Jonathan! It would just be one little lemon tree in my house.
@@Grauenwolf If I start any fruit trees outside, I'll be watching a lot of videos and reading a lot about them. It would only be a few trees, but I want to do it right. Sorry about your peaches. I hope your tree rebounds.
Oh my the baby was just to cute and you can tell he loves some daddy he just smiled and laugh I loved it. I forgot all about I needed help with my lemon tree
I used to live in the Central Valley in California, specifically Stockton, and that area has an unusual (for CA) soil history. Before the levees were built, for probably hundreds of years it used to flood a LOT every year, which brought many nutrients down from the mountains, etc. So the soil there is very rich, not at all dry. I planted a Lemon tree in my back yard which grew beautifully (like everything else pretty much) without hardly any help from me at all. I barely pruned or watered it and never fed it, but it grew tall and wide and produced amazing and abundant lemons. Again, the soil did drain but it was not overly porous, and it was jam packed full of organic matter. It received lots of sun (except in winter) but not a huge amount of rain. This Lemon tree got watered occasionally but not often and it thrived in the rich soil. I miss it and those lemons! (I"m now living in VT.)
I was happy to see this video focusing on indoor citrus. Like you, I get my plants from Fast Growing Trees. They have great stock and great customer service.
yes! Citrus trees are where it’s at this year. 2023, the year we grow and challenge ourselves to grow lemons and limes 🍋
Gotta be honest I think baby was so fun to watch I almost did grasp the lesson 😂 Adorable 😍🥰 laugh is so cute!
Hahahah I LOVE this!!!! ENZO deserves all the likes and thumbs up! Oh and yes thank you for this video
I started watching your video and thought I should tell you that I quit listening to you as soon as your baby came on the screen!!😂. But I will try again, I promise! What a great apprentice you have!
He is sooooo cute! I'm late to this video, but so glad I found it. Forget what you are saying, look at him!!
Seeing the baby smile is so cute
Oh cool !!! Love it!!!
I grew up in Southern California in the citrus capital of the world… Corona, CA, Where the Sunkist factory used to be. The soil is slightly clay, and it’s been worked till it’s arid.
The citrus in my town, grew very well without a lot of amending.
❌⭕️♥️
The sandy soil in Florida makes their citrus juicier than California citrus. Clay soils aren't as porous as sand, so Florida trees can pull more water out of the soil than California trees.
@@willdwyer6782
That’s good to know 😃
Yahooooooo! I was waiting for this! Thank you!❤
You have a knack for explaining thing in a way that is easy to grasp for newbees. Thank you for the great information and your Apprentice is adorable!
This is something I have always wanted to try. Thank you for the update.
Oh such a cuteeee apprentice doing his apprenticeship 😅😍
Enzo is ADORABLE!!!
I have the worst luck w/citrus. I'm on my 3rd one and it's not doing well. I think it's the lighting. Not enough. I guess for growing citrus, I will live vicariously though you!
Thank you! I bought a Meyer lemon tree last year and it has been in our unheated sun room, with windows that i keep open during the summer. I will be repotting this baby in the next month so your information is timely. 120 gallon pot! I would not have to repot at all.
You will kill the tree if you put it in too big a pot. Citrus like to be basically root bound, otherwise you will get root rot as there will not be enough root mass to uptake the water and dry out the soil. Every size up in pot should be about 2 inches. From a 4 inch pot to a 6 inch pot, then a 8 inch pot, etc.
@Tim Johnson thank you! I will put it in a better size pot for this year. And then next year repot into a larger pot.
That little guy adores his daddy. For sure!
Such a cute assistant❤❤❤Thanks for this info!!! Have a Meyeri Improved Lemon to plant.
Wasn't expecting happy baby apprentice🙀😄🖤 My mom cooks a lot of Lao and Thai food often calling for lime so I really hope I can do this🙏 Thanks for the encouragement 💯 Views from a zone 5B!
Enzo is so adorable, super cute. Thanks for sharing all the infos. Learned a lot.
Adorable apprentice!❤❤
OMG congratulations on growing your family :)! Started following you around this time 2020, I am more than ready to grow my citrus inside in 2024:)
Oh my goodness Enzo is ADORABLE!!
love to see him paying attention...
😂🤣😂 I literally could not pay attention to anything you were saying because I was distracted by Enzo. Haha! So adorable!
Have a 20 plus year old mandarin in pot, it lives in a large open north facing porch (garden in the southern hemisphere), my main problem was not watering it enough late summer to late winter when the mandarins ripen. Since that has been improved it produces 50 plus very sweet, easy peel fruit each year. There was a dwarf rooted lemon available a couple of years ago, lost the first one due to too much watering. Second one is looking healthy.
Enzo is so cute ! His little smiles 😂
Oh my goodness, your son is adorable!
I live in zone 4 and have been growing citrus indoors and moving them outdoors in the summer for several years.
Ladybugs and lady beetles eat a lot of the pests that seem to appear on indoor plants, so whenever I find one in the house in the winter I put them with my citrus. They eat scale, mealy bugs, aphids, etc.
Your baby is adorable! Congratulations!
Great video! Thank you Luke. And your Son is adorable! ♥️
Honestly Luke, I didn't hear a word you said after you introduced your adorable son Enzo. What a smile! What tree were you talking about?????
Luke,
That apprentice of yours isn't a very hard worker, tho he more than makes up for it in utter cuteness! ❤😉
😂❤😂❤😂😊Baby so sweet. Good Bless him. Love how he responds. Thanks for the alwmon tips
I bought two lemon trees last summer and I had an issue with June bugs finding them and devouring leaves. It took me a few days to figure out what was eating my little trees but then I caught one in the act. Put a little bug netting over it so the bugs couldn't get to it anymore. They are doing pretty good still.
So I started a Grapefruit tree from the fruit from my mom’s back yard in Arizona 5 years ago. I started it inside as I live in Alaska. The tree is now 5’ tall and I am trying desperately to keep this tree. It’s not in a huge pot like yours and I actually left it outside in the greenhouse when it was 2 years old and forgot about it. I went out after it had frosted for several days in a row and all the tomatoes plants had fallen over it and protected it from the cold. It was happy and green and I whisked it inside the house pronto. I actually really expected this thing to die. 4 years ago I started 3 orange trees. They came from a dwarf tree out of the fruit from my mom’s backyard and I am bringing them along as well. I am researching on the best way to make them “happy” in my home. I moved them last winter into my bedroom which is the coldest room in the house in the winter and the hottest in the summer. It’s winter now so it’s about 58 degrees in that bedroom in the summer it hits 75-85 degrees. I do provide a plant light for them as well. I am watching this video to see how more I can help these plants. Since they are doing so well I want to take the best care possible for them. If you have any advice for me I would love to hear from others that have successfully raised citrus indoors.
First video I don’t pay attention to you 😮! I was all about Enzo! He is adorable
Very interesting Luke. Thank you. I would caution against use of neem oil though. Having had mealy bugs once - brutal!! I threw out any infected plants. I did suggest to a friend to water their infected plants with nicotine water and a periodic hose and it worked for her.
Can you please do more videos with your kids?😍 He is too cute and fun to watch!
He's SO adorable!
Oh my GOSH!!!! Baby perfection😍😍😍. That smile🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰
So interesting, didn't know they grow SO differently than house plants, veggies or even your other fruiting crops. As mentioned, you CAN trim them down once they are been established so you can grow in reasonable sized containers (instead of just a 1xx gallons container).
That baby is a) very impressed with you and b) very likely the cutest baby I've ever seen. :D
I heard nothing you said when Enzo was on camera. LOL! What a doll!
Worth watching just to see that sweet baby!
I am growing a lemon tree and an orange tree in Southeast Michigan. Our best light comes through a sliding glass door in our bedroom that faces east, so I put some grow lights in over the trees. The lights are on a timer and they double as our morning alarm clock.
Thank you so much for your videos. Thanks to your tropical fruit guide I now have an almost 1 year old mango tree sapling growing in my apartment in Maine that I started from a seed I got from a store bought Kent mango.
Buy a tree that has been grafted onto a rootstock (this is what is done for all fruit trees). Don’t start from seed. The reason is you may be waiting 45+ years for the tree to begin producing fruit. And even then, the tree will have new genetics, which might mean the tree will be unproductive, fruit may taste poor, etc. Just spend the $30-50 for a grafted tree.
@@timjohnson3913 I am growing this tree in a pot inside in the state of Maine. I am using it as a house plant and didn’t expect to ever get fruit from it.
No fair. I couldn’t listen to you because I was looking at the adorable baby!! ❤❤❤❤😂
Awww, your apprentice! Too cute!
Good gardening
Like it
Thank you for good sharing 😊
Great video, if you like limes you should try and grow a calamansi plant or some say tree. I have 3 in 5 gallon buckets and love it. I also keep them trimmed to a bush size. They indoor now for the Michigan winter here. Best of luck thanks for the tips in Michigan