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- From: gwv@eastrg2.cray.com (George Vandenberghe)
- Subject: Re: Where will citrus prosper?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.092152.1205@walter.cray.com>
- Lines: 50
- Sender: gwv@eastrg2 (George Vandenberghe)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: eastrg2-gate.cray.com
- Organization: Cray Research, Inc.
- References: <1k5ni5INNma5@aludra.usc.edu>
- Distribution: na
- Date: 27 Jan 93 09:21:51 CST
-
- In article <1k5ni5INNma5@aludra.usc.edu>, rmurphy@usc.edu (Bob Murphy) writes:
- |> I will soon be moving to Columbia, South Carolina.
- |> I love oranges, lemons, and grapefruit and am curious whether
- |> these trees will grow well in this area.
- |>
- |> Thanks,
- |> Bob Murphy
- |>
- |> p.s. Please post responses to the newsgroup since my email address
- |> will soon change.
- |>
- |>
- |>
- |>
-
- I WILL STRESS IN MY RESPONSE THAT I HAVE NEVER GROWN
- CITRUS IN SOUTH CAROLINA AND THE ADVICE THAT FOLLOWS
- IS BASED ON WHAT I KNOW ABOUT CITRUS. CONSULT
- SOUTH CAROLINA EXTENSION AGENTS OR OTHER LOCAL EXPERTS
- FOR BETTER ADVICE.
-
- First the bad news. Columbia SC occasionally gets into the teens
- in winter and has a lot of frost nights. A citrus tree
- planted outside would be severely damaged most winters esp lemons
- and grapefruit.
-
- Now the good news. Columbia has long hot summers and if
- you can protect the trees during the winter you will
- probably get enough summer heat to ripen lemons and maybe
- oranges. I think grapefruit would be tough. But there
- is a LONG history of people growing citrus in areas
- with warm summers and lethally cold winters going back to
- the middle ages in Europe. Also a citrus tree in Columbia
- would probably go completely dormant and would achieve
- its maximum hardiness most winters. Florida citrus
- is often damaged by a few degrees of frost after
- a warm spell when the trees are in active growth.
-
- I suggest you try growing them in large containers
- which spend most of their time outdoors. In winter, move
- them to the coolest place you can find that is protected
- from frost or move them indoors to a sunny window.
-
- The only reason I responded at all to this post is
- because I think growing citrus your region would
- be a really rewarding challenge and I wish I had
- the opportunity. I just bought a house in Maryland
- and am going to try lemons in containers this spring;
- growing citrus outdoors here (except for inedible
- trifoliate oranges) is out of the question.
-