pitchpine
Mame
Hi everyone!
I have some citrus seedlings I started in January, and will not have room for all of them once they need to be potted up.
I've got 2 different species growing, both are colloquially called/used as lemons in Colombia where the seeds came from, but neither are truly lemons.
One species is what's most commonly known as Rangpur Lime, which under good conditions can supposedly flower in 5 years from seed (it is often grown this way commercially because it is generally comes true from seed ) . It has fruit about the size of a clementine.
The second type of "lemon" is an unknown species; it's from a tree on a friend's family farm, and apparently another type of sour orange/lemon hybrid. My friend says it's an "older type of 'lemon' that is not found commercially in Colombia" so you might call it an heirloom variety. It appears to be polyembryonic, so good chance it will come true from seed. The fruits have a wonderful lemon flavor, very juicy, and are comparable in size to a clementine. These seedlings are very vigorous!
Both species would make nice large bonsai, they have lovely, fragrant leaves and were started in peat pellets so the roots are air pruning as they develop and you have the chance to develop a good nebari from the start. Because the Rangpur Lime can flower from a relatively young age, you might even be able to develop a fruiting bonsai from one without having to graft.
If anyone would like a one or more seedlings, just PM me. All I would ask is the cost to ship; I would hate for the seedlings to go to waste!
Laura
I have some citrus seedlings I started in January, and will not have room for all of them once they need to be potted up.
I've got 2 different species growing, both are colloquially called/used as lemons in Colombia where the seeds came from, but neither are truly lemons.
One species is what's most commonly known as Rangpur Lime, which under good conditions can supposedly flower in 5 years from seed (it is often grown this way commercially because it is generally comes true from seed ) . It has fruit about the size of a clementine.
The second type of "lemon" is an unknown species; it's from a tree on a friend's family farm, and apparently another type of sour orange/lemon hybrid. My friend says it's an "older type of 'lemon' that is not found commercially in Colombia" so you might call it an heirloom variety. It appears to be polyembryonic, so good chance it will come true from seed. The fruits have a wonderful lemon flavor, very juicy, and are comparable in size to a clementine. These seedlings are very vigorous!
Both species would make nice large bonsai, they have lovely, fragrant leaves and were started in peat pellets so the roots are air pruning as they develop and you have the chance to develop a good nebari from the start. Because the Rangpur Lime can flower from a relatively young age, you might even be able to develop a fruiting bonsai from one without having to graft.
If anyone would like a one or more seedlings, just PM me. All I would ask is the cost to ship; I would hate for the seedlings to go to waste!
Laura