10 Biggest CITRUS GROWING MISTAKES
Вставка
- Опубліковано 16 чер 2024
- 🌱Introduction 00:00
🌱Mistake #1 Planting a tree without trying the fruit 00:30
🌱Mistake #2 Planting at the wrong time of year 00:49
🌱Mistake #3 Planting the wrong size citrus tree 01:25
🌱Mistake #4 Planting a citrus tree too deeply 02:18
🌱Mistake #5 Amending the planting hole 03:01
🌱Mistake #6 Not watering deeply enough 03:41
🌱Mistake #7 Skirting and over-pruning citrus trees 05:21
🌱Mistake #8 Not fertilizing citrus trees 06:33
🌱Mistake #9 Exposing bark to sunlight 07:27
🌱Mistake #10 Not harvesting fruit 08:02
Citrus is easy to grow in warm climates, but it’s important to avoid a few key mistakes many home citrus growers make. Learn from others' mistakes and enjoy better-tasting citrus fruit for years to come.
This information is for citrus planted in the ground in warm climates that can grow citrus outdoors year round. Look for an upcoming video about how to grow citrus in containers for cooler climates.
Want to learn more? growinginthegarden.com/how-to...
Products used in this video:
Citrus fertilizer: amzn.to/2ZsY0p0
Citrus wrap: amzn.to/3pC5i4u
Citrus paint: amzn.to/3ufBf6u
Soil probe: amzn.to/3dpN8kb
Link to buy garden grids: shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=189745...
Use code 'Angela10' to save $10 off $100.
SUPPORT GROWING IN THE GARDEN
Amazon Shop: www.amazon.com/shop/growingin...
Buy Harvest Calendar: growinginthegarden.bigcartel....
Seeds: Seeds Now www.seedsnow.com/?rfsn=275008...
Botanical Interest seeds:
shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=250954...
Watering Grids: shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=189745...
Use code ANGELA10 to save $10 off $100
Growing in the Garden Raised Bed Mix at Arizona Worm Farm: arizonawormfarm.com/
LEARN MORE
More places to find and learn from Growing in the Garden
Blog: growinginthegarden.com/
Patreon: / growinginthegarden
Instagram: / growing.in.the.garden
Facebook: / growinginthegardenaz
Pinterest: / _created
Thanks for watching!
#howtogrowyourownfood#growinginthegarden#gardeningtips#inmygardentoday#vegetablegarden#ediblegarden#gardenlovers#mygardenthismonth#growyourownfood#organicgarden#desertgarden#arizonagarden
I uploaded a version of this with better audio. Here is the link: ua-cam.com/video/KZfWBgy2KBc/v-deo.html
I like the way you get right to the point without unnecessary chatter. Lots of good information.
I appreciate that thanks.
That’s true. A lot of videos have too much unnecessary chatter.
Rightly said
Yes bloody yes yes yes
It doesn’t come out of me easily but you are probably the best youtuber I’ve found so far when it comes to planting and gardening. I really appreciate what you are doing for us home-growers. A big thank you from the Philippines.
Thanks so much!
I wish I had seen this 20 years ago when I planted my yard, but I am still glad to see it today. Thx!
This video was incredibly helpful and easy to learn from. Thank you so much for the great tutorial.
Thank you for making this Video. Very well outlined and detailed
So informative! Thank you for sharing your knowledge!!
Really good to know about how vulnerable the bark is to sunburn. I'm considering one day espaliering some citrus trees, so I'll definitely have to take some precautions to protect the bark if I do that.
Thank you for getting to the point and for the "why's"... I'm in my 3rd year of my dwarf lemon and I'm pretty sure they are the best lemons I've ever had lol!
Great info ! Just in time, as I'm planting 3 Citrus trees this weekend .
Good luck!
Thank you so much for this! This is very helpful to me as I’m growing orange trees. They’re still plants 🌱 right now but they’re doing great!
Thank you so much. I am planting my Satsuma tree tomorrow.
Excellent information! Thanks!
Thank you very much for the explanation.
This was really good thank you.. I just got my 3rd lemon tree at my 3rd home. I've been moving as soons as the tree fruits. Maybe one day.
I have watched over 20 videos yours is most informative and answered all my questions. Thank you so much
Such a relaxing easy to follow video!
Excellent information. I needed all of these tips and warnings. THANK YOU.
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching.
Great video and fantastic explanations 👏
Thank you 🙋🏻♂️ 🌻
Thanks for sharing
Thank you!
thank you for this video. it was very helpful!
This was so helpful! Thank yoi
Thank you so very much. Helpful advice.
Amazing information sharing. Thanks
Wow such lovely amazing information I have 12 citrus plants n most of the plants leaves r curling n yellow n not flowering since 5t 6 yrs now I know the reason thank u soo much 👏👍
Great video with very helpful info!
The best information ever ! Thank you
Excellent video!!
I love your advice 😃
So much good info! Thank you! 🤗
Glad it was helpful!
Great info, thank you for sharing.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great summary on growing citrus here in the AZ desert!
Thanks so much.
Love it thanks
Excellent timing... I just planted 8 different varieties of citrus trees. Greetings from Puerto Rico.
Hello from Arizona! Puerto Rico is beautiful. Best of luck with your new trees.
VERY VERY INFORMATIVE SIMPLE IDEAS SISTER....thankyou very much sister...
Thank you for the great advice.
You are so welcome!
Wow! That was very helpful. I was doing several of those wrong things.
Glad it helped!
Great video, thanks
Thank you ❤
So helpful!!! I just bought a little three year old Valencia orange tree. It’s got quite a few blossoms already on it. Do you thin these?
Citrus trees typically self-thin. You can remove fruit for the first couple of years if you want to, but the trees often drop the fruit they can't support.
Honestly thanks Gid that i come across to your video bfore making these mistajes.👏👍
Thanks. Very informative and simple. I enjoyed your video.👍
So nice of you
Great tips thankyou Kit robbo
No problem 👍
Excellent tips! Thanks 😀👏
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you Angela!!!! You're the best 👍🏻 do you by any chance have any videos about guava trees? I live in Tucson 🌵☀️🌵
Not yet :)
Great video.
Love it thanks!
Glad you like it!
Awsom video!!!
Clearly content .... thanks for sharing ....
Glad you liked it!
Nice information
Thank you for this great information
Glad it was helpful!
I give this video a 10! Thanks for the info!
Glad it was helpful, thanks for watching.
So glad I found your channel, I’m inspired!
Welcome aboard!
Hi Thk you for sharing your citrus” How to exprtize”.😁😁Love it I am pretty sure use your input! Thks again . I have one orange that need s to plant so I am sure I use your advices!😊😊❤
Thank you so much for your advice. I have only 1 orange tree, first year, lots of oranges. I will remove them now
My soil required a jackhammer to dig the hole being mostly clay. After watching your video I realize I dug the hole to deep. I did mix Ocean Forest organic soil and the indigenous soil together. I've been fertilizing 2x a year but will now take your advice. I also need to expand the circle around the base and water farther out from the root base. It's a dwarf Satsuma and has produced some very sweet fruit. Thank you for the tips. I've subscribed.
Wow. Now I know why my lemon tree of a year hasn’t grown. Thanks for sharing
Thanks for sharing Angela. Now I know why the leaves of my citrus tree were are curled up and after a rain they were back to normal.
It's exciting when we begin to learn the language our plants use to communicate with us.
@@GrowingInTheGarden yup. The plants will tell you when they are thirsty!
Hi sweet I am very love of fruits plant I am growing a lot of plants fruit plant in garden you have best knowledge on fruits plant
Thanks for sharing! I made some of those mistakes, but learning from them is always good.!
Same here. Learn and grow!
Thats a beautiful citrus tree!
Thanks so much.
I’m so glad I watched this this morning. I have 7 citrus trees in containers and they have had curling and yellowing leaves! Now I can fix the problem! Thanks Angela
Best of luck with your trees!
I have mine in containers too with curly leaves in wondering if I just need to water more often
@@bruinrose Sun on the container can damage the roots. Keep your containers shaded or use a larger container around your existing one to provide an air gap which provides root saving cooling. Sun damaged roots often shows as yellowed central veins in the leaves in addition to leaf curling.
Perfect, I just planted a lemon and an orange tree in Vegas!
Congrats!
good job done
Thanks
Great channel Angela. I'm here in zone 8b and Winter Storm Uri devastated the two 7 y/o lemon trees (variety unknown) in our backyard. Leaves are dry, crispy and bright uniform yellow. A few leaf drops but the bark has some splitting. I pruned one of them down heavily since it had serious canker and fungus 8 inches above the graft union. The other tree I left alone since it is healthy and has a better canopy. Any tips would be appreciated
Hard to know. A good dose of fertilizer and watering - see how they come back this spring.
Thank you.
You're welcome!
Thanks for the video! I've been taste-testing my Valencia oranges for the past few weeks. Usually, I have harvested the tree by now but they are still "no go" (almost but not quite). I've held off my Valentine's Day feeding bc of this. Should I go ahead and fertilize now?
It's ok to fertilize with the fruit on, especially if blooms are forming. The tree needs the fertilizer to when it is blooming for sure.
Great video
Thanks!
THANK YOU FOR SHARING!!! 🌳🍊🍋 THE CITRUS TREES DIFFERENCES!!! 🤓🙋🏾🔥🙏🏾👑✝️📖🔥
this was great
Wow.. Best UA-cam info on citrus tree . thx you for sharing. Besides the wind, what cause my citrus blossoms to drop? Zone 9B Most of my 10 gal citrus manderine, tangerine and Clementine flower drop. Water citrus irrigation 2x a month.
Citrus trees often self-thin only keeping the blossoms for the fruit the tree can support.
Great information! Thank you for sharing 👍
I was thinking of getting an apple tree. When should I plant that?
Now is a great time. If you live here in the low desert get it in as soon as you can.
@@GrowingInTheGarden ok, thanks for your advice!
Thanks for your wonderful explanation....I have planted a dwraf citrus tee in July this year and can see lots of blossoms already....should I take them off to allow plant growth or just leave them to fruit
Many may fall off on their own - but you can remove most if you want.
My citrus trees 3 tangerine and three grapefruit froze last winter but have begun resproutingfrom the ground at their base ...i planted them from seed five or six years ago and they have given great large juicy fruit for two last seasons before freezing...should i help the new resprouts by fertilizing ...would loading mulch around the bases help...
Citrus is great to grow and delicious to eat. Best wishes to all the gardeners out there!
So nice of you, thanks.
Finally a video that is actually correct! But don't forget to make a square hole - not round.
Hi Angela, just found your channel I love your teachings of vertical space and this video on Citrus, I have a dwarf tangerine tree that has produced fruit once. It is potted and i keep on my porch in a shaded area with full sun in morning and then bring indoors during winter, it is about 10 years old and has been re potted one time I have been thinking maybe I need to go one more size up this year. it's healthy but not as abundant as the planting/care instructions that came with it (Beautiful Picture of it in adult age). I am currently awaiting arrival of a dwarf meyer lemon. I am in zone 7a in Alabama (birmingham). Sunday from Bama
It can be helpful to increase the pot size. Best of luck to you.
Chào chị nhé, chia sẽ video của chị hấp dẫn lắm ạ
Are there any good complimentary plants to grow around the base? I was thinking of planting a couple watwrmelons near the base so the vines can meander around the basin of my new lime to cool the ground and retain moisture and utilize space better.
Citrus roots are pretty close to the surface. You can try that, but the watering needs of the watermelon and the citrus may be different.
i just got a baby lime tree, and ive never grown one from such a small size before. Thank you so much for these tips! P.S, do you have any tips for growing lilies here? theyre some of my favorite flowers and theres not much information, mostly ive heard growing them with northern exposure and protection are best
I haven't grown lilies before, sorry.
@@GrowingInTheGarden It's all good, ive learned theyre extremely toxic to cats so i won't be growing them after all. Thank you so much for your videos though!
Hey thanks. Good and to the point. One question - bark damage from sunlight, how serious is it and what does it look like?
Lighter, may crack. Trees are more susceptible to diseases. Damaged bark can't be replaced.
@@GrowingInTheGarden I think I've seen it. Thanks 🙂🙂🙂
Thank you for just telling us simply what to do instead of making a long video telling your whole life story.
Hi Angela, Im a new subscriber. Where can I buy basalt dust for making my own compost? I don't live close by, otherwise I would get a truck load of the compost mix. Great stuff!! Love all the info you give. Thank you.
You can get it on amazon: amzn.to/2NynnDG Thanks for watching!
I watched your #5 mistake video but do you add and type of soil conditioner like Gypsum to loosen the hard soil ? I live in Surprise AZ.
Gypsum isn't a bad idea if you want to add it.
Very good
Thanks
Do you recommend a drip line or an actual sprinkler emiter for watering? Im working on a project currently where the clients committed to 3 citrus trees…….. Do you recommend a gravel bed below if the soils is not well draining?
Bubblers are great for citrus. I wouldn't plant if soil is not well draining.
My cara cara citrus tree is young and it went ballistic last summer with long growth at the lower part of the tree. So I pruned all the lower branches to create a straight middle stem to where it forked out. Should I have left these lower branches or is it ok while young and training shape?
It's usually best to leave the lower branches.
Any advice on Staking Loaded Orange Tree Branches SAFELY? To Stake or Not to Stake Orange Tree....?
2022, 30+ year old, Orange Tree, San Francisco Bay area Zone 10a/b - but with weird Bay-Effect Micro Climates 1 Mile off the North Bay amid rolling hills, is more loaded with large 4"+ fruit ( after dropping hundreds of early drop marble sized fruit buds last Spring which made Us concerned We might be left with no Ripe Seasonal Fruit, but We were very mistaken...! ... ) than it has produced in 8-10 years ( of poor attention / care ). We are now worried the Ripening Fruit, which is so abundant it has changed the overall shape of the dwarf tree in the last month, 7ft tall x 12ft+ wide, which now droops significantly ( no branches near or touching the ground yet ). We heavily wood chip mulched all orchard trees with 8"-12" which has done WONDERS for Apples Plums Cherries Apricots Lemons Limes; so far, so good.
I see a tree in your video with rocks at its base. Is that a recommended mulching option for citrus? Valencia Orange and Meyer Lemon. Thank you.
Rock mulch is better than no mulch - that's what many of my trees in the front yard have. An organic mulch like wood chips or composted mulch is a better option.
Wow....
Can u pls do similar video for guava
I just transplanted the grapefruit tree from the ground to the pot. Can you please tell me what do I need to do? I keep it in the small pot and in shading cause it’s too cold now. Thanks in advance
Can be tricky to transplant from the ground to a container. Container plants are more susceptible to frost damage as well, keep it in a sheltered location.
I just purchased a home with a neglected lemon tree (about 20 ft tall). Lemon rinds are very deformed and not smooth. Lots of dead branches, too. Are there steps I can take revitalize this tree?
If the trunk shows severe sun damage it might be too late. As long as the trunk isn't damaged too badly there might be.Remove the fruit from the tree and trim out the old branches (now is a good time to do it). Get it on a good watering and fertilizing schedule. Paint or cover the exposed trunk.
Angela is there anywhere in the valley you would recommend buying a mandarin from?
I really like Greenfield Citrus Nursery.
Oops, recently planted a cara cara orange tree, and I amended then soil 😢 hopefully it doesn’t hurt it too much.
Good information video....
Peace from indonesia
Thanks for watching! Hello from Arizona!
@@GrowingInTheGarden ❤️❤️❤️🙏
A few of the lower hanging branches on my orange tree ended up giving fruit this past season. However, the weight of that fruit caused the limbs to hang very low, about ground level. Leaving some of the fruit to develop while touching the ground. That fruit eventually broke off from the limb or just rotted while on the branch. Would you advise me to clip a few of those lower hanging limbs or leave them as they are?
With apples I often use some poles or stakes to temporarily hold up heavily fruit burdened branches, might not hurt to prune a bit
You may want to trim those lower leaves, but I wouldn't prune the entire branch off.
This is great information. Can you please elaborate on your point about not exposing the trunk to sun damage? Aside from the visible damage, what else can happen? Can it stunt the overall growth? Reduce fruiting, etc? I don't live in a lower desert like you, but I do live in an area where our summers can average 90-105 degrees from mid-June to about early September. Thank you.
Ideally the trunk is covered by branches - but exposed bark suffers sun damage, When fried by sun the bark dehydrates, blisters, shrinks and cracks.
I bought a lemon and lime tree in February. I couldn't plant because we're waiting for our pool to be done. Now its done, finally, and its almost June!! Should I just transfer the trees to a 5 gallon bucket until fall or next spring and then plant? (I'm in Mesa)
It depends on the the location. If they get afternoon shade in the new spot it would be better to get them planted. If the area is in full sun, then keep them in a larger container in partial sun until temperatures cool down.
@@GrowingInTheGarden Thank you so much! It'll be full sun so I'll wait. Glad I asked.