London is: 51.5° N; Hardiness Zone 9; Heat Zone 3; 24 inches of rain a year
In the south when the wind gets to 75 mph they give it a name and call it a hurricane. Here we call it a mite windy...
Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
London is: 51.5° N; Hardiness Zone 9; Heat Zone 3; 24 inches of rain a year
Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
May Lotito wrote:Update on my single peach flower: I hand pollinated the flower with a q-tip but didn't expect the self pollination to work. Now 3 weeks later, there seems to be little peachs growing! Triples too. I guess I need to thin the smaller ones but now the fruits and stem still look pretty fragile to touch.
London is: 51.5° N; Hardiness Zone 9; Heat Zone 3; 24 inches of rain a year
Striving to grow things as naturally, simply, and cheaply as possible!
My YouTube channel
Striving to grow things as naturally, simply, and cheaply as possible!
My YouTube channel
In the south when the wind gets to 75 mph they give it a name and call it a hurricane. Here we call it a mite windy...
London is: 51.5° N; Hardiness Zone 9; Heat Zone 3; 24 inches of rain a year
Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
London is: 51.5° N; Hardiness Zone 9; Heat Zone 3; 24 inches of rain a year
Striving to grow things as naturally, simply, and cheaply as possible!
My YouTube channel
London is: 51.5° N; Hardiness Zone 9; Heat Zone 3; 24 inches of rain a year
London is: 51.5° N; Hardiness Zone 9; Heat Zone 3; 24 inches of rain a year
Striving to grow things as naturally, simply, and cheaply as possible!
My YouTube channel
Kevin Young wrote:I planted some peach pits last fall and none of them came up (I am in northern Utah). Did you do anything special prior to planting? I'm surprised to see how quickly your peach trees have grown!
Works at a residential alternative high school in the Himalayas SECMOL.org . "Back home" is Cape Cod, E Coast USA.
Kevin Young wrote:I planted some peach pits last fall and none of them came up (I am in northern Utah). Did you do anything special prior to planting? I'm surprised to see how quickly your peach trees have grown!
I can understand growing a locally-adapted annual vegetable, but growing a locally-adapted peach seems much harder due to the long time span between planting and harvesting. Do you have a timeline or specific plan you are working through?
And if you obtain something you are really happy with, where do you go from there? Do you clone your new variety onto existing root stock, or do you keep on breeding?
Striving to grow things as naturally, simply, and cheaply as possible!
My YouTube channel
Ryan Kremer wrote:I started a peach tree from a pit several years ago and it's only 6 inches tall or so yet, but I see what you all have started and they seem to shoot up really quickly! Why is mine so slow growing? For context, it's directly East of an existing peach tree maybe a foot or so away from the other tree.
Striving to grow things as naturally, simply, and cheaply as possible!
My YouTube channel
Ryan Kremer wrote:I started a peach tree from a pit several years ago and it's only 6 inches tall or so yet, but I see what you all have started and they seem to shoot up really quickly! Why is mine so slow growing? For context, it's directly East of an existing peach tree maybe a foot or so away from the other tree.
Kevin Young wrote:I planted some peach pits last fall and none of them came up (I am in northern Utah). Did you do anything special prior to planting? I'm surprised to see how quickly your peach trees have grown!
London is: 51.5° N; Hardiness Zone 9; Heat Zone 3; 24 inches of rain a year
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