How much you water citrus - or any tree, for that matter - largely depends on your soil type and whether you have good drainage or not.
Citrus does well in just about any soil but very sandy soil. It does like good drainage, so if you have compacted clay soil on level ground, don't water often. But, when you do water, water slowly and deeply.
New trees should be watered a little more frequently than established trees, especially during the first year of a hot summer. After that, they may not need much watering at all if they are in or around other landscaping that gets regular water, such as a lawn.
In very hot desert climates, the trunks of new trees need to be protected from sunburn. A local nursery can help you determine if wrapping or painting the trunk with a special solution will help protect a new citrus tree.
Citrus responds well to fertilizers and organic materials worked into the soil. However, be careful not to use uncomposted animal manures as you might burn the plant. Water deeply after any application of fertilizer. Citrus typically needs a yearly shot of chelated iron with zinc. Consult with your local agricultural division (state or university) for specifics on your area.
Too much fertilizer of any kind may retard fruit production. Well established trees (5 years or more) in good soil may not need any fertilizer at all to produce tons of fruit.
Good luck. I hope this helped.
2007-03-25 17:40:45
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answer #1
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answered by SafetyDancer 5
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There are a pair problems with this concept. First, 2 of the kinds of fruit the kinds you reported (apples, pears) are tailored to animal dissemination. In different words, the seeds interior the fruit are tailored to an animal first eating the fruit, digesting it, and then transporting it to a diverse region. the seeds of apples, case in point have a confusing seed coat which could pass with the aid of an animals digestive gadget devoid of being broken down, jointly as the the remainder of the fruit is digested. then the seeds are deposited with some fertilizer offered via the animal scat, in yet another place. the different situation is that maximum fruit you get in a food market has been heavily manipulated so as that they produce tasty fruit, yet not inevitably to produce the terrific seed. Navel oranges, case in point do not produce possible seeds in any respect, purely stable fruit. they are commerically produce via grafting the navel orange branches (produced in specific nurseries) onto a root inventory (comparable orange tree, different than devoid of as stable of fruit). the navel orange you get in the food market finally ends up without possible seed. likely, in case you purely placed a fruit from the food market in the floor the organisms that rot the physique of the fruit could rot the seeds as nicely, ensuing in no new apple or orange tree.
2016-11-23 15:56:34
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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Try these :
http://www.ehow.com/how_3628_grow-orange-trees.html
http://www.sunkist.com/products/how_citrus_trees.asp
http://okok.essortment.com/orangetreeora_rnbe.htm
2007-03-25 17:30:35
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answer #3
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answered by NZlink 2
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