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#1
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Kiwi?
All -- Somewhere I picked up that there is a variety of Kiwi that is hardy
to Zone 4. I'm up in Zone 6a and would like to find some varieties I can plant up here. Anyone have any suggestions? James |
#2
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Kiwi?
I can't be of much help. Here in zone 8 I have enough trouble getting the
plants that I grew from seeds from store bought fruit to flower. This link may be helpful. http://crfg.org/pubs/ff/kiwifruit.html --Art "JNJ" wrote in message ... All -- Somewhere I picked up that there is a variety of Kiwi that is hardy to Zone 4. I'm up in Zone 6a and would like to find some varieties I can plant up here. Anyone have any suggestions? James |
#3
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Kiwi?
"JNJ" wrote in message ...
All -- Somewhere I picked up that there is a variety of Kiwi that is hardy to Zone 4. I'm up in Zone 6a and would like to find some varieties I can plant up here. Anyone have any suggestions? James Those are hardy kiwis. There are many varieties. You need a male and as many females as you want (up to six). They take 5-6 years to start fruiting, and like the other kiwis, they are big vines. You can have them shipped to you from dozens of mailorder places. |
#4
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Kiwi?
JNJ wrote: All -- Somewhere I picked up that there is a variety of Kiwi that is hardy to Zone 4. I'm up in Zone 6a and would like to find some varieties I can plant up here. Anyone have any suggestions? James Arctic kiwi, Actinidia kolomitka, is hardy to zone 3. The male plant is particularly attractive, with bright pink and cream variegation that looks like paint splashes. Regular hardy kiwi, Actinidia arguta, is reputed hardy through zone 5. These are not the kiwis one finds in the supermarket - they are small, grape-sized fruits that are very sweet. You will need a male and at least one female plant to produce fruit. They are available at Raintree: http://www.raintreenursery.com/ pam - gardengal |
#5
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Kiwi?
I'm in north AL. I've tried to grow Kiwi's several times because 1) I love
the fruit and 2) they're nice vines and very pretty. I really don't expect them to fruit here, but would like the foliage just the same. I've tried several times with mail order plants and all have died. If there's a trick to getting the things to grow, I'd love to hear it and I'd give it another try. I've got a trellis I want to grow them over. Sunny spot. Good drainage. Clay soil. Kim |
#6
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Kiwi?
"K, T, E & N" wrote in message ... I'm in north AL. I've tried to grow Kiwi's several times because 1) I love the fruit and 2) they're nice vines and very pretty. I really don't expect them to fruit here, but would like the foliage just the same. I've tried several times with mail order plants and all have died. If there's a trick to getting the things to grow, I'd love to hear it and I'd give it another try. I've got a trellis I want to grow them over. Sunny spot. Good drainage. Clay soil. Kim "Good drainage.- Clay soil." Seems like a contradiction to me. Anyway I love the fruit too, but am usually disappointed with what's available in the supermarkets lately. I wish I could get some fruit from my plant, but it's a bit cold here for the standard type that I have. They need a fair amount of water, especially during a drought. I'm at the north edge of zone 8 and haven't had any trouble with plant survival. You are in zone 7 which may be too cold for the standard variety (certainly to get fruit). The link I gave yesterday gives a fair amount of technical information. --Art |
#7
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Kiwi?
Okay. Clay soil - but it's not that bad - perks good. And I have slope so
there's not any standing water pooled after a rain. I've started plants in pots, for up to a year. Put them in the yard and they died. I probably didn't water them enough. I'll copy the information from the web address you gave. Maybe get some plants next year. Thanks, Kim |
#8
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Kiwi?
JNJ wrote:
All -- Somewhere I picked up that there is a variety of Kiwi that is hardy to Zone 4. I'm up in Zone 6a and would like to find some varieties I can plant up here. Anyone have any suggestions? James Miller Nurseries in Canandaigua NY carry several varieties of cold-hardy kiwis. The fruit is small--like a large grape & wonderfully flavored. Also fuzz-free. Use a very strong trellis if you grow them. Minteeleaf |
#9
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Kiwi?
arrrgggghhh .. I have had "labeling" problems with Miller. Try Raintree. they got
lots of stuff, so does Edible Plants. Ingrid Minteeleaf wrote: JNJ wrote: All -- Somewhere I picked up that there is a variety of Kiwi that is hardy to Zone 4. I'm up in Zone 6a and would like to find some varieties I can plant up here. Anyone have any suggestions? James Miller Nurseries in Canandaigua NY carry several varieties of cold-hardy kiwis. The fruit is small--like a large grape & wonderfully flavored. Also fuzz-free. Use a very strong trellis if you grow them. Minteeleaf ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#10
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Kiwi?
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