I bought a peach off you. It gave us 4 peaches last year. We got close to 400-500 this year. i have been giving bags of them away. 😂 i should have thinned them out. Florida Prince is the way to go.
My nephew grew an olive tree years ago, he didn’t think much of it until he retired, by then, the olive tree was bearing copious crops. He started to “put up” the olives from his tree in various ways, using various recipes. I’d always liked olives, but what he bottles is spectacular! I so like his Olives, I went to a specialty Nursery and bought him 6 olive trees, each a different cultivar (btw, he lives on 10 acres in a Mediterranean climate). By now, he has learned a thing or two about gardening). I’m looking forward to helping him eat the results of his gardening. My next present to him is a home olive press!
Moringa is not fruit . It is vegetable. I have 5 moringa trees in my front yard. I also have shahtoot, chikoo, jamun, apple custard, fig , lime, olive ( no fruits from 2 olive trees from 10 years). Now I want to grow chaunsa mango and date 41:48
28:00 - have you tried growing the raspberry variety known as Mysore? I believe it's a black raspberry that grows and zone 7 to 10 or something like that
I wish i could fast forward a few years when my fruit trees are actually producing... I planted almost 100 fruit trees around my property and now all I can do is sit and wait for them to hurry up and grow 😂
@@TheActiveLifeLived I'm slowly starting to get a couple of fruits! Mostly dragonfruit, panama berries, miracle berries, and passion fruit so far. Hoping for a few more things next year but we shall see! Still planting lots of new trees too!
@@Darkfyre755 awesome....do you mulch? I've been mulching like crazy with any fresh limbs I can find and throw em in the wood chipper...I have so many native worms now!!!
@@TheActiveLifeLived I mulch like my life depends on it 🤣 I live in a pretty harsh climate with lots of heat and very dry winters and incredibly compacted clay soil, so mulch is like the lifeblood of my garden haha. Over time things are improving a lot, especially as I'm adding more bana grass and nitrogen fixing trees for chop and drop mulch and shelter for younger trees
Great selection of trees. I have each of them planted in zone 9b in Ca, but haven’t found a good way to use the olives yet. They all need to be processed before use. Any way you could do a video on how to use/process olives?? Thanks! 👍
Can you comment on your container watering setup? In your videos Every container has a few of the plastic holders with a small line that provides water. It looks like it’s an efficient way to water all of your containers? And would be interested in the controller you use too. Your citrus is beautiful. Luv your videos. Watching from Tennessee
There’s a lot of perfection here. It’s like you are literally god. You plant to perfection, you water to perfection, you fertilize to perfection, you’ve never had a tree die. You are the greatest arborist to have ever existed. We are not worthy. Stay humble my friend.
i always suggest that people look at what fruits, vegetables, herbs, and other edibles can be "hidden" as normal landscaping. currants make great hedges, daylilies (not orientallilies!) and Dahlias are edible and no one blinks twice... many herbs are decorative landscape plants...
may i strongly urge everyone to look into native plants for their region? the american pawpaw, for instance... or the service berry in my region of pennsylvania. the beach plum for the coast, and the american hazelnut ...
You literally have the best selection of quality varieties of fruit trees. I’m from Florida and contemplating a trip to Arizona so I can visit your nursery. I’m salivating at all your varieties. I’m an experienced food Forrest gardener; I have roughly 40 fruit trees. I’m no way on your level but I’m in awe. I wish we had something like you here in Florida. You would make a killing if you shipped to Florida! Otherwise I love watching your videos! I literally have your channel on while I’m at work lol. Thank you Sir.
@@ArizonaFruitTrees ooof it’s so expensive here now. Land is so overpriced. Prices are coming down a bit now but it’s still so insane. I have to ask what variety of olive tree you have there next to the road. Last year I brined my olives for the first time. But I’d say that my tree is probably 3 times the size of yours. But I’d say that three of your branches have more flowers than my whole tree lol
Similar climate, 9a, N. lowland Cali, I get peaches June to October, not continuously but enough to get tired of them. Biggest problems are far too many fruit and leaf curl disease in wet yrs like this one.
Thank you so much. Please if you have any info on growing certain fruit trees from seed from the super market. Please. You are experienced into handling and maintaining plants. Thank you so much again. I am in Dubai, UAE. It has similar climate 45 degree celcius heat in summer and its a desert. The imported mesquite form the US in 1980's and its everywhere here.
@@MaLiArtworks186 Hello MaLiArtworks, two reasons, first, my grandfather did and told me to, Second, the birds do a lot better on the fallen fruit and the trees do a lot better on the manure.
I live in an apartment on the third floor. I have a balcony that gets partial sunlight. I'm in Phoenix. What can I do to grow something that yields enough to be worth the time?
Most of the pears i have encountered were very hard, flavorless and dry... have 2 trees i bought, one is sterile, nothing but stunky fliwers, the other stinks, too, but it has flavor and some juice to it too...
Pomegranates can be reproduced so easily from cuttings, they strike very easily from tip cuttings, I find the ones that thrive are the smallest cuttings, but just to see, I’ve struck cuttings from branches that were nearly 1 inch thick (but do much smaller ones for vigour). They also grow easily from seed.
You can also grow mango, java plump in your beautiful property. These trees can bear very high tempreture around 50 degree centigrade. In Pakistan these trees are grown in very hot climate. The fruits are very sweat.
I had great success with the mid pride peach comparable to the Florida prince however maybe it was just the I was caring for it because I had no other peach trees
The problem is…..not knowing how to plan and prioritize the space. I’ve already used my top sun space where a mulberry tree should be but I don’t dare move the fig tree I just planted.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!???????????????? Thank you for all your information!! How often and how much water for a well established olive tree??? I want more olives! 😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃😃
Thanks for the information!! I could ask so many questions, I’m also learning to grow in the valley and have started with the citrus. I did recently pick up a cheap mission olive tree from a frys and have repotted in terracotta, hopefully it does well, it’s flowering right now!
Thank you for doing this. I live in Az, and I am trying to plant fruit trees. Like you, I feel we are heading for some dark days. Can we keep them in buckets? I know my HOA only has a few fruits, but if I find dwarf I can have them. Where do buy all these fruit trees?
I have a question about the olive tree - is the root system invasive? I am considering planting a olive tree to give shade to my garden but since I have a small garden I am afraid it can damage the foundation of the house
Jay hello from Las Vegas, I have a 2yr old Anna apple in ground but its full of yellow leafs (chlorotic). The tree woke up about a month ago but we had lots of rain. Could the yellowing be too much water during dormancy or lack of iron in the soil?
They do that when fully stressed as a younger tree in full sun, Add some organic material so the tree can pick up iron zinc and copper. Soil is too alkaline
You wouldn't happen to know an older lady by the name of Lynette Zang would you? She has a food forest in Phoenix I believe... Heart of a company by the name of ITM trading...
Mesquite is primary; 2 varieties in the yard, local Honey and a Velvet. Velvet is easy to train to grow straight. Native, needs no irrigation, food tree. Shade, legume. For thousands of years mesquite, not maize, was queen of the gardens. Olives are great, but slow to produce. Nor do they like our heavy winds in bloom time. 2 varieties in the yard. Mulberries, 2 varieties in the yard, Pakistan and Dwarf Everbearing. Pakistan is loaded with fruit this year. Citrus!!! Gotta have it. Tangerine, kumquat, Meyer lemon, and calamondin. Jujube, 2 varieties. One apple, Golden Dorsett. Everything and anything gets apples in it. Dorsett is very good in pies if picked a little unripe. No pears, the one I had burned up in the wind. NEED PEACH TREES. There is space out front, south side of the house, for a peach. Florida Prince looks good. Figs! One Brown turkey, a Texas Everbearing went in last spring, and a Black Mission in late fall. The Brown Turkey tends to form a 3rd mess late in the years but they remain small all winter. Right now, they’re swelling into some nice fruit that will be like leather, but tasty leather LOL. Next crop, summer, always fantastic. Grapes, 3 varieties.
Excuse me, but did you just say "if you're not getting two to twenty feet of growth on your fruit trees per year"? Because I'd really like to know what fruit trees grow twenty feet per year.
I'll be near you at the end of them month and will definitely be stopping by. My two question are, do your trees do well in Tucson and do you think I be able to fit a mulberry in my jetta?