here is a answer that will help you and some other info tha tyou might have not known....
Q: The other day I bought some peaches and I was wondering, if a person plants the peach pit, will it grow into a tree? (Enderlin, N.D.)
A: It has the potential to become a tree. Whether or not it does is anybody’s guess. Most likely no, but even if it did, peaches don’t survive North Dakota winters.
and the other info....
Q: I ate a peach yesterday and the pit was partially opened. For the first time I noticed there were seeds inside and so I bit one to see what it tasted like. It tasted very almondy to me and have a nice soft nut like texture. Are these seeds edible and if so, why can't I find any commercial reference to them? (E-mail reference)
A: Not a good idea! You are fortunate to be alive. All parts of the peach, plum, and cherry are poisonous, with the stone kernels containing the highest concentration of cyanide, at 164 mg/100 grams. While no human deaths have been reported, hogs and cattle have succumbed to eating fallen peaches pit and all. Now you know why they are not for sale on the market.
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hope that helps.....hope i gave you what you needed.......good luck with that....
2006-07-19 05:20:55
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answer #1
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answered by Vanessa w 2
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I've done it. But it takes 5 to 10 years for peaches to grow and the peaches start out in much poorer qualilty
2006-07-19 05:15:49
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answer #2
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answered by christigmc 5
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Ya you can just find a nice open spot and plant it like you normaly would a flower or something and water it daily just the basic plant stuff and you should get a peach tree.
2006-07-19 05:16:53
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, that is how peach trees get their start.
2006-07-19 05:21:56
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Have executed it with countless the fruit stones, regularly depart them in water for form of 10 days then placed them contained in the refrigerator (in foil) for 6 weeks after that plant in a three" pot at round 70' sealed in a plastic bag out of direct image voltaic. yet might want to apply stones from quite ripe fruit, difficulty is a lot of our fruit is forced and stones at the prompt are not waiting to germinate, attempt first from a community grown fruit tree
2016-11-06 20:11:04
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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I tried it once, and it didnt work. Maybe if you dryed it out, or grew it in a peach growing region though... worth a try. use miracle grow.
2006-07-19 05:37:42
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes
2006-07-19 05:15:10
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answer #7
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answered by Wounded duckmate 6
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the peach has to go through a dormat time in life so freeze the seed and next spring plant seed in soil in small pot and give it lots of sunshine and love
2006-07-19 13:25:30
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answer #8
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answered by real blonde 3
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yes, but it would take many, many years.
2006-07-19 05:17:16
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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