Los Angeles Times

His job was both plum and peachy

- By David Karp Karp is a special correspond­ent.

For more than six decades, Floyd Zaiger and family developed nearly 420 fruit and nut varieties.

Fruit breeders, who make crosses, plant experiment­al seedlings and evaluate them, generally labor in obscurity, but Floyd Zaiger, the most prolific and arguably the world’s greatest fruit breeder, was a high-profile exception.

Over six decades he and his family developed 420 fruit and nut varieties patented in the U.S. — by far the greatest number of any fruit breeder — and introduced Pluots, firm but sweet whiteflesh­ed peaches and nectarines, and fruit crosses such as Peacotums previously thought to be impossible.

Zaiger died June 2 at his home in Modesto. He was 94. The cause was unclear, but he was under hospice care when he probably had a heart attack or stroke, and died five days later, said his daughter, Leith Gardner.

Chris Floyd Zaiger was born April 26, 1926, in Kennard, Neb., to Christian Fredrick Zaiger and Anna Marie Zaiger, the middle child of nine. His mother called him “Floyd” to distinguis­h him from his father, who was known as “Chris.” His family, which farmed in Iowa and later Oregon, was poor, and Zaiger left school after eighth grade. During World War II he served as a paratroope­r with the U.S. Army 11th Airborne Division.

After the war he received his general equivalenc­y diploma, attended UC Davis with support from the GI Bill, and graduated with a degree in plant pathology. He married Betty Jean Taylor in 1950 and taught high school in Modesto, where he started breeding azaleas and rhododendr­ons as a hobby.

Fred Anderson, a fruit breeder known as the inventor of the modern nectarine, took him on as an apprentice in 1956 and Zaiger learned quickly. He soon struck out on his own, running an ornamental nursery by day as he pursued his dream at night.

“I’d caught the dreaded disease of fruit breeding,” he recalled in a 2000 interview.

He focused on improving stone fruit — peaches, nectarines, apricots, plums and cherries — and introduced his first variety, Royal Gold peach, in 1965. But he dreamed of combining plums and apricots, his two favorite fruits, like his hero, Luther Burbank, the great turn-of-the-century fruit breeder. Burbank had managed to partly overcome interspeci­es sterility and hybridize plumcots (half plum, half apricot), but most were small and sour, and they never caught on.

By making thousands of crosses, Zaiger discovered plumcots with good flavor, size and productivi­ty.

He released a few, such as Plum Parfait and Flavorella, but the real breakthrou­gh came when he backcrosse­d plumcots to plums, creating interspeci­fic plums that he trademarke­d as Pluots.

These new varieties — starting with Flavor Supreme, Flavor Queen and Flavor King — were sweet, juicy and rich, and along with later varieties, revolution­ized the plum category.

Today interspeci­fic plums from the Zaigers and other breeders account for three-quarters of plum production in California, his daughter estimated.

Zaiger crossed tender low-acid white peaches with firmer yellow types to create low-acid white-fleshed peaches and nectarines that were sweet when firm enough to ship, like the almost preternatu­rally sugary Arctic Rose. Low-acid yellow varieties followed, and today peaches and nectarines with low and intermedia­te acidity abound.

Zaiger and his family invented many other fruit types, including interspeci­fic apricots, sold as Apriums; cherries with winter chilling requiremen­ts so low they can be grown in Los Angeles; crosses of peach, apricot and plum sold as Peacotums or Colorcots; and even some crosses so complex that no common name for them exists.

But the family’s greatest success has been the Independen­ce almond, which does not require pollinatio­n by bees and is now grown on nearly 50,000 acres in California, mostly in the Central Valley.

In addition to his daughter, Zaiger is survived by his two sons, Gary and Grant, who also work in the family business, Zaiger’s Inc. Genetics; six grandchild­ren; and 16 great-grandchild­ren. His wife and siblings predecease­d him.

 ?? David Karp For The Times ?? A PLUM JOB OVER SIX DECADES Floyd Zaiger and his family developed 420 fruit and nut varieties patented in the U.S. — by far the greatest number of any fruit breeder. Here he inspects a plum-cherry hybrid at his Modesto orchard in 2009.
David Karp For The Times A PLUM JOB OVER SIX DECADES Floyd Zaiger and his family developed 420 fruit and nut varieties patented in the U.S. — by far the greatest number of any fruit breeder. Here he inspects a plum-cherry hybrid at his Modesto orchard in 2009.

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