The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Socal and citrus: A mutual love affair

- Please send questions or comments to joshua@ perfectpla­nts.com.

One of the greatest blessings of California living is winter’s crop of citrus fruit. Just when vitamin C is most needed, we have a ready supply of it on hand. Now is the time that navel oranges and their varieties — Robertson and Cara Cara prominent among them — begin to ripen and will do so over the next four months.

Indeed, residents of Southern California reach the conclusion, sooner or later, that the most desirable fruit trees to grow are citrus — oranges, mandarins (tangerines), grapefruit­s, lemons, limes and kumquats. This is not to say that apricots, plums, nectarines, figs and apples won’t produce. In fact, certain varieties of these trees may yield so much fruit all at once that you end up giving most of it away.

But this is part of the problem with deciduous fruit trees; the fruit ripens during a period of a few weeks. With evergreen fruit trees — citrus, avocado and guava — harvesting takes place over several months. Where citrus harvest is concerned, there is a bonus to being lazy: the longer the fruit stays on the tree, the sweeter it gets.

If you had one Valencia orange tree (for spring and fall eating) and one navel orange tree (for winter and early spring consumptio­n) in your backyard, you would have fresh oranges to eat practicall­y every day of the year. There are also varieties of lemon (Eureka and Lisbon) and lime (Bearss) that produce year-round. Finally, certain kumquats and their hybrids fruit nonstop and are used for ornamental purposes individual­ly or in hedges. Kumquats are the hardiest of all citrus.

Once a citrus tree is establishe­d, it should not require much maintenanc­e. Many homeowners with 20- or 30-year-old Valencias proudly testify to their complete neglect of these trees. Yet there they stand — botanical marvels of greenest green foliage and orangest orange fruit. They have lived through a multitude of California

droughts and earthquake­s, implacable as the original Valencias that once grew upon the rugged Spanish plain. The oldest orange tree in California is a Valencia in Valley Center (northern San Diego County) planted in 1869. It still produces a respectabl­e crop, while the oldest navel orange, also still producing, is in Riverside and was planted in 1873.

Pruning of citrus is only necessary for removal of dead or diseased wood or to keep the tree in bounds. Lemons require the most pruning, primarily of vertical growing water sprouts that show great vigor but no fruit production. Lemons and limes are more sensitive to cold than other citrus. Now that the coldest part of winter is gone, you will want to apply fertilizer. It will soak into the ground with our seasonal rainfall, which is typically most abundant in February.

Citrus in containers may defoliate during the winter. When this happens, replace the soil in the container, prune and fertilize lightly. As the weather warms, foliage will return. Container plants may require fertilizat­ion several times during the year; an occasional liquid feeding with fish emulsion or seaweed, combined with applicatio­n of slow-release Osmocote granules, should keep your potted citrus happy.

A common complaint concerns homegrown grapefruit­s that lack sweetness. If you try to grow the red-fleshed grapefruit­s — such as Ruby — that are produced commercial­ly in Arizona and Texas, you will be disappoint­ed. The grapefruit variety most suited to our area is Oro Blanco, which

you can also grow as a hedge.

An excellent choice for a small ornamental tree with year-round interest is the kumquat or one of its relatives. The kumquat is to the orange what the crab apple is to the apple — a small, tart version of the larger fruit. The limequat — a cross between a kumquat and a lime — has the taste of a lime and the cold tolerance of a kumquat. Trees are laden with soft-skinned yellow fruit during the winter. The calamondin — a cross between a kumquat and a mandarin — is also coldhardy, and when mature, is adorned with hundreds of fruit at all times. Any of these kumquats can be used as a 4- to 6-foot evergreen hedge.

Most of our citrus tree species trace their origin to China, from where they migrated to the Middle East and, eventually, to Europe. The oldest European citrus trees — citrons or sweet lemons — on record were planted in Pompeii, as evidenced by seeds found there, buried in the hardened lava that quickly inundated the city after the volcanic eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD.

When I first moved to Los Angeles, I thought there must be a neighbor who didn’t like me. Each morning, I would find large orange peels in my backyard. “Someone is eating oranges and throwing the peels over the fence,” I thought.

After several weeks of peel collecting, I discovered the source of this nefarious littering. Orange peels were indeed falling out of the sky, but not through human agency. Running along telephone wires above my yard were squirrels — whose deterrence has been the subject of a recent column. These squirrels often carried oranges and, stopping to suck out the sweet pulp, let the peels fall where they may.

John Lingle, who gardens in Long Beach, has found a solution to squirrels that run along block walls, from where they leap onto adjacent fruit trees. He utilizes plastic spikes that are advertised for deterrence of birds, raccoons and cats as well. Lingle affixed the spikes to his block wall with double-sided Gorilla tape. To protect strawberri­es and blueberrie­s from squirrel predations, he covers the plants in green chicken wire, a material from which he also makes tall circular barriers around his fruit trees.

Janice Liebee of La Palma recommends a product called Repelsall, which she found at a home improvemen­t center. “It’s safe for animals,” she writes. “It causes a mild irritation to their nasal passages and they don’t come back. I use it in my front yard and it works great for raccoons” — so I imagine it would be effective with squirrels, too.

Gary Dailey, in Riverside County, has learned to keep rabbits out of his vegetable garden by growing crops that rabbits won’t eat, including zucchini, watermelon and potatoes. “Rabbits will eat the leaves of sweet potatoes,” he adds, “but usually the plants grow faster than rabbits can eat them, so it’s not a problem.”

Due to citrus greening disease and the citrus quarantine establishe­d throughout large areas of Southern California, a limited number of nurseries sells citrus trees at present. I learned from Lingle that Armstrong Nursery in Long Beach is one. If you know of other nurseries selling citrus trees, please advise. If you do purchase one and live in a quarantine­d area, you should not take fruit you grow outside your property. Consume it solely at home and dispose of any fruit you don’t eat in the trash.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Oranges and other citrus trees thrive in Southern California yards and orchards, and the crop ripens over the course of months, extending your enjoyment of the fruit.
GETTY IMAGES Oranges and other citrus trees thrive in Southern California yards and orchards, and the crop ripens over the course of months, extending your enjoyment of the fruit.
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