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I live in a tropical area and would like to try growing a couple of peach trees from seed.

2006-08-22 13:41:58 · 7 answers · asked by kh 1 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

7 answers

Most commercial peaches are harvested from grafted trees. You can start from seed, but it will take a LONG time until they produce fruit. Also remember that peaches, like apples, need a different species tree to cross-pollenate for fruit.

Peaches from seeds are possible, but either you need the patience of Job or the greenthumb of a Master. Your best bet is to buy a commercially grafted set of trees.

Good luck!

2006-08-22 17:49:18 · answer #1 · answered by progrockgal 2 · 0 0

strange but I was under the impression that peach trees don't do very well unless they have a winter dormant season. But I guess places like Georgia and Texas wouldn't have any peaches then, so that must be wrong. Also, I would think you would need to wait at least 10 years before you see a peach from a tree you started from seed...hope you are patience!

2006-08-22 16:48:33 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

When I was a kid I planted peach tree seeds and grew three large peach trees. I lived in far west Texas where the summers were warm and dry. Each summer the trees produced more peaches than we could eat or package. We gave them away for free.

So yes, you can grow them from seed if the climate is right. For starters you may want to plant them in a pot with good sandy soil, and add small amounts of fertizer until they reach a size where you can transplant them.

2006-08-22 14:37:22 · answer #3 · answered by richard Alvarado 4 · 0 0

I plant the seeds about 3 inches deep in a raised box filled with potting mix. Usually by late fall I begin to see the seeds sprout. When they are about 6 inches tall, then I carefully repot them in a large pot and let them grow all winter in a protected area away from wind and snow we get in Texas. By the following spring they are either big enough to go in the ground or into a bigger pot depending on size. I usually cover the new trees with a tomato cage that I ve covered with window screen to keep the bugs from eating them. Grasshoppers will eat the trees when they re young. Once the tree is as tall as the tomato cage the trunk of the tree is usually tough enough and big enough to continue growing without the tomato cage anymore. I have 20 or more baby trees in various stages of growth that I ve planted over the past 6 years and the oldest ones are taller than me. No fruit yet but I think in another year I may see the first peaches on the oldest trees.

2015-07-30 15:04:27 · answer #4 · answered by Horse And Dog Lover 1 · 0 0

Don't know how experienced you are in such things. Most fruit seeds you might save and plant, you will not get the same type of fruit. Both peach, yes, but a lot of fruit trees are grafted. I have recently done that with apple seeds, and the apples suck. They are like crabapples.

2006-08-22 14:17:47 · answer #5 · answered by old_woman_84 7 · 0 0

unusual yet i became less than the effect that peach timber do not do all precise except they have a wintry climate dormant season. yet i wager places like Georgia and Texas don't have any peaches then, so as which could be incorrect. also, i'd imagine you'll favor to attend a minimum of 10 years formerly you spot a peach from a tree you all started from seed...wish you're staying power!

2016-12-01 00:51:42 · answer #6 · answered by schlau 3 · 0 0

I have no luck with any tree from seed.

2006-08-22 13:50:53 · answer #7 · answered by Autumn 5 · 0 0

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