I started 2 pits last fall. Left them outside in pots all winter. (Wisconsin). I forgot about them and in spring I had two seedlings growing. They’re already 2 feet tall.
@@tamickahamilton7258 nope. Just plant the whole pit. I put them in a 6” pot with miracle grow soil. Make sure the squirrels and chipmunks can’t get at them. They need to be cold through the winter.
I put mine in a pot of soil, left them outside all winter (6b) sw Ontario and they came up strong in spring. Highly recommend getting a peach tree for your yard, super producer and very quick, about 6 yrs max from baby.
I cracked my peach pit open and then just placed in damp napkin in fridge. I figured just give it a few months and the sign of a root would mean time to come out
@@DeesBotanicalBliss there’s a few things to look at here: did you take it out of cold stratification, did you get it from a peach variety that isn’t sterile, was the peach ripe, etc. I’ve had issues like this with Redbud and Dogwood trees too
You don't.... Naturally during the Winterization " time in the Fridge in moist soil" the shell started to Degrade... Yall on the internet but refuse to use google....
Odds are it won’t fruit well from seed but I just cracked shell open with hammer, put a ziplock bag with paper towels and a couple of the actual seeds without their armor in. Wet it all good and nice. Put in freezer or fridge (idr) until the little sprouts came 😇 then potted till they were all healthy like and spring time
The resemblance of peach seed offspring to the parent plant varies depending on the pollination partner, but generally, they exhibit many similarities, although not identical.
Peach seeds and the refrigerator they've gone to stratification process but I have to crack them open now I got these from Clemson University peaches that I purchased at a stand I've heard you have to crack shell open I didn't put any soil in mind I just put them in a brown paper bag dated him and I'm going to crack I need my do that later in the video I haven't watched it all LOL😊
Typically it’s good to do this when it’s wintertime anyways. That way when you start the seeds you can place them outdoors in the spring. Just like how they’d naturally grow.