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citrus success

No wonder citrus trees are so popular. With their cheerful winter colour, delicious health-giving fruit, glossy evergreen leaves, fragrant blossoms and compact proportion­s - what more could we want from a tree?

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Mandarins

Satsuma mandarins such as ‘Miho’, ‘Miyagawa’, and ‘Silverhill’ have a loose easy peel skin. Great for family gardens, they are small trees with an appealing spreading shape. They are also among the most cold tolerant citrus and make a lovely courtyard tree with their intensely fragrant summer flowers. The various Satsuma cultivars offer a range of harvest times, so if you have the space it’s worth planting more than one. The ‘Clementine’ mandarin is a much smaller tree with very compact growth, ideal for pots and formal gardens. It has spherical fruit and bright green leaves.

Oranges

Oranges are more cold tolerant than lemons, but they need plenty of sunshine and warmth for ripening and sweetness. Valencia oranges such as ‘Harwood Late’ are picked mainly in autumn. Navel oranges, such as ‘Carter’s Navel’ and ‘Newhall’ ripen in late winter or early spring. They have a ‘mini orange’ embedded in the apex of the fruit, which from the outside looks like a navel. Blood oranges have red pigments in their flesh, with few seeds. They ripen in late winter.

Grapefruit

Grapefruit is the largest of the citrus trees. In a mild climate popular ‘Golden Special’ makes a sweet breakfast treat with no added sugar.

Lemons and Limes

Lemons and limes will flower almost continuous­ly and can bear multiple crops throughout the year. Because they never stop growing, lemons and limes are more sensitive to cold than other citrus.

‘Meyer’ is our most popular lemon because of its cold tolerance, compact size, few thorns and huge yields year after year. Ripe fruit will last several months on the tree. ‘Yen Ben’ is the most popular of the more acidic lemons. It will tolerate mild winter frosts once establishe­d, and is a prolific bearer with the main crop maturing in July.

‘Tahitian Lime’ is the best-known lime in New Zealand, strong growing but compact and almost thornless, bearing a winter crop of seedless thin-skinned fruit, which are pale yellow when ripe.

‘Bearss Lime’ is also popular, a more vigorous spreading tree.

‘Kaffir Lime’ has guitar shaped leaves, which are highly aromatic and used in Asian cuisine.

Braving the cold

Generally, citrus prefer a warm, frost-free climate, and most are grown in the North Island. However they vary quite widely in their cold tolerance and are grown with success in quite marginal climates. In general, the order of citrus hardiness is; kumquat (most cold tolerant), satsuma mandarins, oranges, tangelos and hybrid mandarins, grapefruit, then lemons and limes (most cold sensitive).

In cold frosty climates it’s best to delay planting until spring, and to protect young trees with frost cloth. Older trees recover more quickly from cold damage than young newly planted ones. A few hours below zero may severely damage both fruit and foliage, and a bigger freeze can be fatal. In winter fruit may turn yellow with the cold before they are ripe.

Make the most of microclima­tes. Choose a warm sunny location for your citrus tree, perhaps near a masonry wall that will store the sun’s heat. Mulching with pebbles has a similar effect. Prune only in spring so that new growth has time to mature before winter. Don’t prune to remove frost damage until after the risk of frost.

Healthy, well fed and watered trees are the most frost tolerant, but South Island gardeners should avoid feeding in autumn as this promotes soft growth susceptibl­e to frost damage.

When citrus trees are grown in pots, they can be brought into shelter to escape frost.

Citrus in containers

Small growing citrus trees, such as mandarins, lemons and limes, and those grown on dwarfing rootstocks are best for pots. A large pot is needed as smaller pots dry out too quickly. Use fresh, top quality container planting mix. When growing a citrus tree in a pot, it is important to take extra special care with watering and feeding. Feed every year in spring, using controlled release fertiliser only.

 ??  ?? Below: Clementine mandarins Right: Kaffir limes are grown for their aromatic leaves.
Below: Clementine mandarins Right: Kaffir limes are grown for their aromatic leaves.
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 ??  ?? Sooty mould
Sooty mould
 ??  ?? Frost damage
Frost damage

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