7 Citrus Tree Mistakes to Avoid
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- Опубліковано 19 тра 2024
- After a year of growing citrus here at the Epic Homestead, here are a few issues to avoid if you want more success growing citrus, no matter where you live.
00:00 - Intro
00:46 - Thinning The Interior
01:06 - Pruning Before Flowering
02:12 - Pruning For Shape
02:56 - Not Removing Fruit
03:55 - Letting Too Many Weeds Grow
04:32 - Not Preparing In Fall
05:44 - Not Protecting In Winter
06:53 - Outro
IN THIS VIDEO
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My grandfather was a citrus nurseryman in Florida. He always said "First year sleep, second year creep, third year leap." He'd pinch off all the fruits the first year, let his 2cd year citrus grow one, maybe two fruits, and then the third year let 'er rip for a huge harvest off of healthy trees. He said it was like having babies before you were fully grown-- you don't want to stunt their growth!
Even if you do make a few of these mistakes, don't give up! I planted a meyer lemon tree in my front yard about 10 years ago, but only really start to take my garden seriously about 3 years ago. The lemon tree was kind of sad and thin looking, but with better care and feeding it looks great now. Random people walking by will comment on it, and I'll leave the extra fruit that I don't think I can use out for the neighbors to take.
Well said Joanne!
I’m going to try this. My Meyer is looking sad too.
@@epicgardeningIs it ok to prune now in late March, early April in Southern California? I’m concerned about the rain. Will that hurt the trees? Thanks.
@@epicgardeningA follow up to the container lemon tree part 1 would be helpful as you talked about trimming back the branches to create airflow, but then say the opposite here.🙈 Glad I kept looking around at other videos!
Edit: go to 7:15 on that video for reference.
Meyer Lemon trees can take a lot of abuse. I speak from personal experience, LOL. I hard pruned mine last year and had fewer lemons but they were also the size of small grapefruit. I also upped my fertilizer game.
Love Citrus Trees, everyone should grow some if they have any room at all, a tree for life. Nice Video
Yes citrus trees are great, for me the adventure started with a Kumquat which I killed by mistreating it over winter. But oh man those fresh fruits from the tree got me hooked instantly. Now I am 15 plants and one glasshouse in the garden further!
And also have already one growing outside in central europe (my area is equivalent to Zone 7a in the US)
This last winter in Houston it plunged to around 15. I wrapped a citrus, about 4' to 5' in tent made of blankets and placed 2 light bulbs in special sockets underneath. It survived several days of the cold without any apparent ill effects and continued growing vigorously when the weather warmed.
We close on our first house next week and one of the first things I’m doing is planting citrus trees! I’m very excited
CONGRATS!
I've pruned plenty of fruit trees, you are not just allowing airflow, you also allow light to areas that otherwise would be shaded. Best time to prune is right after harvest, and take off sucker branches on the inside up to flowering. Giving your trees light and air energy will increase fruit production and stronger branches for bigger fruit.
Depends where you are. Here in the low desert we don’t want more light. We want it to self-shade. The summer sun is brutal. It needs a thick canopy to protect the trunk.
The citrus we grow in Southeast Texas also need winter protection from cold. That comes from leaving a dense bush shape with a skirt that reaches nearly to the ground. Just the opposite of peaches and apples is needed for citrus.
@@larrytischler570 oranges this can be good but in Arizona, makes more of a hassle to get to the fruit. Plus less room for birds and other animals to come make a home when you trim. Im not an expert in all climates but this has got me some good returns .
@@grabithard2534 doves and cardinals nest preferrentually in very thick citrus. The red birds do a good job of eating orange dog catapillars and grasshoppers. I dont want other animals in my trees they eat the fruit or seeds in the fruit.
@@larrytischler570 oh my.. yeah i had to move several nests out on a few trees i took care of. Nasty birds have no respect for the food we eat 🤣
Great video Kevin! One other mistake I’d add is not removing rootstock suckers from the base of the tree. Most citrus is grafted and the rootstock can easily take over a young tree and suck energy from the scion you wanted if they aren’t removed. Thanks for your great content, love your videos and channel.
Yup, fantastic one! I would have included had I not already removed ;)
Is this something that happens with apple trees?
In a prior video he talked about the grapefruit tree because he thought it was a lemon tree, and it was both a grafted lemon and grapefruit.
Can I remove rootstock suckers if I mistakenly let them grow for 6+ months? Do I just prune them off close to the base of the tree?
ua-cam.com/video/ZD9qFT1FyC0/v-deo.html
Florida gardener here! Great video on citrus! Love love your channel!
I live in New England and have one Citrus tree indoors for the winter. It seems to be doing well. Had to get a better grow light, but it’s better than the tree stressing and losing leaves.
I live in zone 9a/b and the Christmas lights have literally saved my plants during a hard freeze or lengthy frost. I'm not sure how much they can help in colder climates, but they do work to push the temps up just a few degrees above freezing.
Really, so u leave it outside and keep lights in it ??? I'm in a 9 a/b I believe aswell and debating getting a lemon tree but I'm worried about having to bring it in, as I Dnt have grow lights or a place to set up such a thing
@@erinjoy5625 In my case it wasn't a citrus tree, but tomato and pepper plants. Tomatoes and peppers are less cold hardy than citrus trees, and die if the temps dip below the mid 30's. Since citrus trees are usually frost tolerant to the high 20's, I think the Christmas lights should work for them.
My full set up was basically a crude high tunnel over the garden bed with the lights. I made a box of PVC with plastic sheeting over it. The plastic sheeting was a plastic paint drop cloth I found at Lowe's. Then I strung the lights up inside of the sheeting. I also heavily mulched the plants with straw. And they surprisingly did okay.
EDIT: The tall PVC hoops that he sets up in this video are similar to what my set up was. ua-cam.com/video/pHru4eZI1VA/v-deo.html
@@erinjoy5625 Do not worry too much, cold and dark also works (not freezingly cold) they will drop many leafs but will make a rebound in spring. Citrus trees (although normal lemons are a little bit more picky than others) go into a winter hiatus in such a condition!
@@erinjoy5625I don't know if you ever got a lemon tree, but I I'm in 8b and I grow Meyer lemon, Cara Cara orange, key lime, Ray Ruby grapefruit, and satsuma. Without Christmas lights. Not all citrus has the same cold tolerance, you have to choose the right variety
BEST TIMING FOR THIS VIDEO !!! I have sooo many citrus trees and I’m overwhelmed. I’ve been in over my head in charge of a giant tropical garden 😭
THANK YOUU !
One thing about container citrus that differs is that you do want to open up the centre by pruning a bit, because if you're keeping it inside, it won't be getting as much airflow and will be more susceptible to mold issues, scale, etc. At least that's what I've found. Even if it's not as good for the tree, it's much easier to maintain if/when you do get something like scale that you need to reach in to deal with to keep the tree healthy.
Just picked my first lemon of the season yesterday in Ontario Canada! 7 more pretty much ripe, 11 more green on the way, and it's currently blooming again lol.. not bad for a 4 foot tall, 4 foot wide tree in a pot!
Oh and 7 green oranges and new blossoms on my orange tree (harvested I think 4 oranges a few weeks ago, smaller tree than the lemon)
Love love love love love growing citrus up north - nothing beats the smell!! Both the flowers and the leaves!!
Yeah if there's a bit more protection indoors, I can see that working just fine
Yes i too have a young lemon tree in a pot currently cosy in my unheated greenhouse in wintry London (I went berserk in lockdown and bought the tree and the greenhouse!) and it's fruiting like mad! Had 4 lemons off it at once and there's another 7 or so coming through. I was stunned to get that crop end of December - thought it'd be summer cropping only. If follow Kevin's advice to remove fruit in the first season, not sure if should take off the tiny growth lemons as well as the big ones?
What variety of lemon and orange trees do you have? I would like to try planting both indoors in pots too!
@@ginawilliams7577 That sounds like it'd probably be a good idea if it's a new plant! The nice thing is that some varieties (not sure if all) will fruit multiple times in a year! I remember picking a lemon last Spring that had basically overwintered in the sunroom! It just seems to keep blooming and having various stages of growth so you'll get plenty coming soon if you're patient now!
@@hburtch50 honestly I'm not sure! I believe my parents bought the orange tree as a young plant in Florida on vacation, but I asked my Dad about the lemon tree and apparently it has a stranger origin (through cuttings from a friend?) so I don't know the variety. I'll comment back if I find out!
I think pretty much any trees should be okay as long as you keep them pruned so they don't get rootbound. Just watch out for scale!! It's the worst on citrus and so annoying to deal with lol.. look up what it looks like if you're not familiar so if you're looking at trees you can make sure they're not coming with those hitchhikers lol
I did what everyone said not to and started citrus from seed, growing fast and can’t wait till my four pomelo trees fruit:)
I bought a couple of citrus trees in late November and there already producing more than 20 fruits per tree. I have no idea how or why so fast, but I'm happy.
Hey hey I saw your other video. Not only can you eat the sweet potatoes, the leaves taste great too! You just need to cook them with a bit of garlic and they will become very soft. Great source of nutrition and fiber. And they grow super fast.
I really liked this video! I live in zone 7b Oklahoma and have several citrus trees. I wish that I could plant them in the ground, but sometimes it gets too cold, just like a few weeks ago it was -4 degree F with the wind gusts. I’m afraid that even with all of that winter protection they would die. I keep them in a heated greenhouse over the winter and take them out when days and nights are above 60 degrees F. Please try to post more videos about citrus care when you have some time 😀🙏🍋🍊
I live in New York but my grandpa in Florida grew the BEST citrus I have ever seen and tasted. Brings back memories!
Hard to beat Florida citrus!
Citrus has been something I’ve been wanting to get into. This was helpful 💪🏼
I am really enjoying all your videos. I have started growing all sorts of plants inside right now getting ready for spring to get a garden going and also some citrus! Also Growing my first batches of microgreens!
0:47 Man even just hearing that sweet sweet pond in the background relaxes me.
OMG Kevin! I have been pruning my citrus wrong this entire year. 🙈🤦🏼♀️🤦🏼♀️ thank you for this video.
Love your channel. Thanks for tips on colder climates!
Glad you like them!
If you wrap the tree with lights they must be the old-school type, as of course LED lights don’t put off much heat to have any benefit. Cheers!
Came to say this
The incandescent C9 lights work great. Each strand has about 150watts
Good point...Yes!
Coming back to this vid when I finally get critrus trees. Thanks so much!
Live in Missouri and remember my grandparents had an orange tree in a pot that bore fruit around Christmas. It was about 3 feet tall and my grandpa was so proud. Almost 40 years ago. I hated the spikes. Lol good memories
Dollar Tree had 2022 heirloom veggie, herb, and flower seed packets 25 Cents today at my local store in AZ. Big variety. May or may not be in every Dollar Tree but worth looking for if you have a Dollar Tree store near you.
Thanks for sharing Kevin, I have citrus growing right now, lets see how it turns out!
Great tips, thanks for sharing! Looks like you may need to treat for leaf miners as well. Happy harvest!
I absolutely adore citrus and am so happy growing them in our bay area garden! They bring so much joy and excellent nutritious treat in winter! I hope your citrus wall grows nicely and fills out to the beautiful edible green garden wall that you desire! I have the same thing growing along my west facing fence line and so far so good! The Eureka lemon has really taken off. I highly recommend growing Eureka Lemons they will shock you with the major growth they can obtain in just 1 year! Loving our Washington Navel as well sweet as can be in March here in bay area weather. When do your oranges ripen up there near to San Diego? Ok see you around the garden for now. Best of joy, luck and faith in the garden!
I live in a subtropical climate. Nobody prunes their lemon or oranges trees. The trees fruit well but I have to admit that it is a bit hard to harvest due to the branches and hight. I just bought a lemon tree and I plant to prune it. Great video I am gonna follow your tips. Thanks ☺️👍
Really appreciate you addressing growing citrus for those of us living in cold climates. I was indeed thinking, 'Wow Kevin, must be nice...' :D
Good tips and in the uk at the moment it’s -1 and my citrus trees are in a greenhouse with candles keeping them warm 🥰 but I am always happy with your advice 👍
Great info and timing
I just got my Calmondin here in zone 7
Lol 😂 Kevin feeling all our our beady eyes staring him down as we sit here and freeze in 20 degree weather. I’m watching this with a heated blanket on my lap. Great video as always!
Every video including agricultural/farming videos I watched had advised on thinning the interior for citrus tree including mandarin tree.
My Lemon tree ended up with an open canopy because of my constant battle with Citrus Leaf Miners, I've been told a lot that an open canopy is the best way to go, I'll start training it to fill in the middle if that's the case, I can do a bit of scarring in the middle branches 👍
i'm in north mexico, and I want to plant a lot of citrus too 😍 as of now I only have calamansi! Philippine lime/lemon 😜
Great video, thank you for sharing, keep and enjoy the fruits
Thinking about getting into citrus cultivating for commercial purpses. Subbed!
Typo in the thumbnail, excited for the vid I've been wondering about the tree hedge
Wish we had the climate for them here they look awesome 👏
I put C9 xmas lights on all my citrus. Being in south carolina, the night temp can get down to 15F and with xmas lights and a frost blanket I can keep the temperatures above freezing IF you wrap them before sunset.
“Not on my watch!” Lol!! Another informative straight to the points video. Killing the video game Kevin!
I just bought a lemon tree yesterday! It'll be living in a pot on my patio/drive way
I'm glad I'm not the only one that feels hurt when removing fruit and/or pruning! :-)
Like with many plants, especially those for their flowers, it is best to have the plant grow more leaves. Flowers and fruits can take up a lot of the plant's energy which may slow down its growth overall.
I've used the christmas tree lights, the C4 incandescent ones to protect my citrus here in the Santa Clara valley and it does work. Now I'm just using frost cover. My citrus are all in containers too and because I have no indoors to move them into and they are over 3ft tall and heavy besides I use the covers.
Thanks Kevin, first here on your IRIE channel and so appreciate your kind and professional help, we have a Yellow Grapefruit Tree, about the size of yours, and doing my research here on UA-cam the black sooty mold it has is due to insect infestation, well I have the remedy now but my chalan(helper)pruned it taking off a significant amount of greenery, creating more airflow, after seeing how your grapefruit is "bushy looking", I just hope ours isn't affected negatively by this imprudent pruning. Thanks for sharing, 👍and greetings 👋from Querétaro! 🤠
You will like Oro Blanco. Grapefruit/pommelo cross, super sweet large fruit.
watching people who live in warm environments makes me sooo jealous lol. up here in minneapolis apples are pretty much the only fruit tree game in town. jonathans are tastey at least...
The pruning tip has really thrown me off. I live in the newly classified Zone 9A on the Alabama Gulf Coast where it is very hot and steamy. Local nurseries instruct us to prune the interior around the trunk and main stem for air flow. BTW, XMAS lights under a planket really does work.
Thanks for another great video!
I live in Florida and miss our citrus trees. We had two lemon trees and a tangerine tree and they all succumbed to citrus greening disease (HLB).
A note on the Christmas lights-don't use the LED ones. They don't put off enough heat. They're also acceptable for keeping your oil from freezing if you don't have a head bolt heater on your car and you live in the north. Just like them up and stick them on your engine overnight.
Try the four season ctrus tree, it give fruit almost all over the year , thank you for the information
You can get row cover bags for fitting over trees.
Very informative Sir! Thank you Sir!
Great info as usual. I think if using Christmas lights they must be incandescent not LED.
Hope you see this as I'd love some advice. I have two trees that I'm about to pull my hair out over. I live in the central coast area which is usually death to citrus as we have cold winters but I have a beautiful west-facing courtyard enclosed on three sides that my dwarf lemon and dwarf grapefruit (large container potted) love. They're doing beautifully. Except for the *bleepbleep* scale I have on the grapefruit. I want to prune and thin out the grapefruit so I can more easily spray for the scale which hides on the underside of the leaf but now I'm not sure. I'd love some expert advice and suggestions on how to deal with the pest in more organic, less potentially harmful way.
Second problem: My mom got a baby cara cara orange that she was planning to container grow the same as my lemon and grapefruit but it did not love the winter. My parents don't have my sheltered courtyard and the cara cara suffered for it. It still has a green trunk but lost all of the leaves. We move it to my courtyard, I gave it a small sprinkle of citrus fertilizer and positioned to get max sun while staying out of any wind or cold and I'm going to cross my fingers. The lemon sprang back for a worse case--although I may have rescued the root stock-- so I'm tentatively hopeful. Any other advice on how to rescue a seriously stressed and dying citrus tree would be awesome. Thank you for your consideration and thank you for such accessible videos.
Hi there new listener of your podcast and I had a couple of questions I was wondering if you could answer them on there.
1. Growing and selling seedlings. When do I start them so they’re not too big or too small to sell when it’s time to plant?
2. If I grow asparagus bean (very underrated plant) near bush beans will they create a hybrid?
3. Could you put silica packets with your seeds when saving them to keep them dry?? Or would they get too dry/altered?
Thank-you great understanding of citrus ,plants ,new sub
Thanks. I have only one orange tree for now. Next will be lemon. I have like 10 oranges on my tiny orange tree. I did not know i should have removed them but now it is too late - they are all ripe now
Thank you for sharing.
I noticed my orange and lime trees grow best when short, stubby, and narrow. Prune it back after the fruit ripens and all fruit is picked off. Remove dead branches. If the trees’ height is 6 feet, prune it to 5 feet.
Sweet! Love your channel.
Dang! I cut out a bunch of internal crossing branches on my lemon after watching your Loquat pruning video.
we recently planted orange, lemon, naartjie, 2 x lime varieties. they are slow growing compared to the lemon which self seeded in our water from sink run off area....... it's massive.
I'm in the front range area of Colorado and judging by how mild this winter has been we should be able to grow citrus outdoors here soon!
Me too, are ypu growing cannabis or hemp at all???
Weather vs climate
@@Youngstomata let's be frank, that's just what your pastor told you to say. "Were you there?!"
@@thepeff lol no pastor or religion tells me to say anything. Im not a sheep. Also, Colorado is zone 5 (-20F). Must be smoking the good stuff
@@Youngstomata why do the crazies always work the word "sheep" into conversation. Why do coloradans always have to imply they're some type of "native"? Genetically and culturally you are closer to a Californian.
I wish I had the space for that many citrus trees! Excited to see yours grow! It looks like you have a leaf miner problem though. I released some Diglyphus isaea parasitic wasps that go for the miners and put out some leafminer traps on our trees.
I will have to try this. All my citrus are getting hit pretty hard with them, and nothing I've tried has worked. Any other suggestions that worked for you?
@@awkwardtexasstranger5660 Nothing else. I don't like using chemicals and using soapy water didn't help since the leaf miners are protected inside the leaves. I put out the traps and introduced the wasps in early 2021, pre-winter storm and after since I didn't know if it would have killed them. I still have some leaf miners around but definitely not as much as 2020. In 2021 there were a good amount of branches that had normal growth. In 2020 it seemed like all the new growth was impacted.
@@argutierrez1 Any improvement would be welcome, so I'll be trying the wasps in spring. Thanks!
Great video. I have five citrus trees around my property and all have some sort of citrus leafminer damage. I was told by my local nursery that the only thing you can really do is just let it run its course. What do you recommend?
I was waiting for a follow up and tips
Loved this video!
You're right Kevin, I am bitter about you being able to Harvest Citrus in early January. 😠 My citrus trees are inside my back bedroom starving for light. 😳I'm going to be adding a plant light today! I'm hoping they will make it till warmer weather. 😠🌱🍋
I'm so glad to see your homestead growing in Leaps and Bounds!😇🌈🌱
Hey Kevin, is the Whatsapp comment legit? Did I win something?
I had a beautiful, bountiful Meyer lemon tree. I basically ignored it except for fertilizer twice a year
Hey Kevin i realy enjoy your videos, I am a big fan and a little envious of you climate.
You a a big citrus fan, so am I. The 2 i like rhe most are the “ugly” and the “pomelo” have ever seen them or heard of them. They are delicious. I would like to know more about them. Loving wishes aya
I'm in San Diego as well. My orange tree (that we guess at least to be 40 years old) is absolutely loaded! Tried one orange almost 2 weeks ago before harvesting, still wasn't very sweet. Left them on the tree. When is the best time for oranges here in SD to be picked? I had to prune a branch back at non optimal timing due to the weight of the branch, I was worried it was going to snap off, it was hitting the fence and extending over sidewalk. I didn't count them all, but over 50 was my count on the one branch. Tree is so loaded with fruit.
Planted a meyer lemon and sweet lime in the spring and totally made the mistake of not taking enough of the fruit off. Took some, but definitely not enough, hoping they make it
Xmas lights work. I use them for my citrus trees in a much colder climate with the combination of the agrilcloth like 4-6C more than outside. Just be careful that lights arent LED those don't give off much if at all any heat.
Older Christmas lights will put out far more heat then any of the modern LED ones so keep that in mind if trying to Christmas light method.
Great information. What to do with a citrus that is grown in a pot as espalier as far as keeping interior dense canopy?
As far as grow lights for vegetables like lettuce my question here to you is : Is the grow light harmful to the nutrients derived by the plant and would it still be considered organic at this point?
🍋
Question, recently moved to new home, there is lemon tree in front that is totally surrounded by white decorative rocks up to base, this cant be good ? Should I clear it away and mulch it around base and leave a 6-8 inch clearing at base, not sure.
Thanks for sharing 🙏 😎 🏖 🏝
My lemons and lime trees are indoors (I'm from NY)super sunny morning/ early afternoon sun all the leaves are falling off 😭 and the flowers are drying up and falling off. I have some really small fruits that have been there a while and some flowers in different stages.the trees are going on 2 years old.
Great video! I planted some Lemon seeds from store bought lemons over a year ago and after getting hit by Spider mites, the plant survived and is now about 8 inches tall. Hopefully it gets to the size of your's one day! 🍋🌳
Just so you don’t waste your Love and energy…. Growing from seeds is possible but it will take around 7 years for your trees to develop fruits…
@@followp I know, I was just trying it for fun, and I would be surprised if it actually produces any fruit. Thanks anyway!
@@followp hi, I also planted a lemon seed an my trees bout 10 ft tall.Im in zone 7 so I bring it in for the winter.Its had some blooms for 2 yrs but never any lemons.Any suggestions on fertilizing it?Im goin to repot it this spring.
@@beesmith9508 just any citrus fertilizer will do. lemons arent very needy, just make sure you dont move it around too much when you take it in and the most important thing ever for any citrus especially for the winter is to get a hygrometer.... lemons hate when they get too much water and if you take it in for the winter the chances are very high you will water it way too much. a hygrometer will elevate any lemons lovers citrus skill to master level 100 overnight.
We use string lights for warmth in the winter. When paired with a blanket, they stay nice and toasty on freezing nights. ***Must use incandescent lights! LEDs aren't warm enough.***
My lemon tree is putting on loads of fruit here in the winter in the uk in a north facing window 🤣 granted it is one of the hardiest lemon trees, im just taking from it that its happy
It's interesting that you've mulched right up to the trunk of the citrus. I've seen other gardeners comment that you want mulch far away from the trunks of citrus. I saw one even say out to the drip line (but compost or wormcastings in the inner area was ok). What do you think?
Great video thanks
I can't watch this! 😭 it would make me toosad. Lol. I live in Canada, and not the lower part! 🤧 I've never seen a citrus tree in person. I've seen snow. Lots of trees with lots of snow....
Citrus just isn’t a viable option up here in Oregon- but glad to see some new content. Was wondering what happened to you and your citrus orchard.
Back in action, don't worry :)
Same
Thanks!
Lol I've made a couple but not bad.
Thoughts on trying out same paw paw fruits they are temprit and can take heat up to 105 and down to -20
I have a cara cara orange that needs some light pruning. I have NO IDEA when It's ok. It blossoms and starts to set fruit before we've finished harvesting the current year. The fruit is almost ready to go, but they're best in late February. I'm stumped.
Great point…It’s more about avoiding mistakes!! Awesome tips on citrus!! My Meyer’s Lemon tree will appreciate my new knowledge when trimming it!!🪱🪱🪱
nhìn cây trĩu quả mê quá
Thanks for another useful video. I have to bring in my citrus in the fall. Could you suggest a good way to get ants and pill bugs out of the pots before bringing in?
Angela at Growin in the Garden says that the fruit at the bottom is often the sweetest. So if you skirt the tree by removing lower branches, you'll be missing out on the sweetest fruit.
ive had two citrus in the ground for 3 years and havent gotten squat!! i live in phx, az and were known to citrus….maybe not at my house
Old-style mini Christmas lights. Not the newer LED's (that should probably go without saying!).
I've been known to cluster my potted patio "marginals" and drive tall garden stakes in a circle around them. Then toss old bedsheets over the whole mess on super-cold nights (went thru a lot of Dollar Tree plastic clamps!)
I should have watched this video first haha. I don't regret cutting off the couple branches I did though on my variegated pink lemon. There were a couple lower branches dragging through the soil. It bugged me. I'll sacrifice fruit for now lol.
I'm Canadian though and it's strictly being grown inside with supplemental grow lights in our snowy winter.
New subscriber here! I want to grow a garden this year. The only spot I have is facing East. I know, you’ve mentioned the direction of your garden is vital to the success of it. Do you think East facing would be good still?