Hi Rachel,
I am not in a dry climate (I get probably 3 times that amount, so not rain forest, but a decent amount), and I know that was the question. However, I couldn't help but mention that my
experience has been that hardy Kiwi's are really hardy. My wife bought a male and female plant because she liked the color of the leaves. They sat in pots for weeks before I got a chance to plant them. I had some 6x6 beams around a
trellis and planted them in a sort of
raised bed that was 3 feet long and about 12 inches wide. One on each side. The next year I decided I wanted to move the trellis to make the garden more straight. This shifted the plants over about 2 feet. They kept growing. A wind storm knocked the trellis over on top of them and it sat for weeks before I had a chance to set it back up right. They kept growing. The next year I decided I wanted that trellis in a whole different area about 30 feet away. I told my wife we may need to replant the Kiwis, but I would stick them in there. I had to pull about 4 feet of vine out of the trellis sides, broke leaves, a branch or two, and I know I shortened the
roots. When I moved them that last time... they kept growing AND had a few fruit on them. Then the trellis fell down again, and I removed it entirely, again pulling the vines out of the trellis and left them with very little to grow on. They were still alive, green, with leaves when we moved later that year. I didn't have the heart to try moving them again.
"The future is something which everyone reaches at the rate of sixty minutes an hour, whatever he does, whoever he is." C.S. Lewis
"When the whole world is running towards a cliff, he who is running in the opposite direction appears to have lost his mind." C.S. Lewis