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#1
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Peach Trees From Pits?
Hello,
I have searched the Internet and cannot find information on whether or not a peach tree will grow from the peach pit. Does anyone know about this? If it can be done, how? thanks so much. Jo-Ann -- Invalid address-Please post request to e-mail me. |
#2
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Peach Trees From Pits?
Greetings......yes they can.........sow a cleaned pit in a moist sterile
germination mix and place in plastic bag well sealed........stick it in the fridge for two months and then into warmth for germination.......HW "Jo-Ann" wrote in message ... Hello, I have searched the Internet and cannot find information on whether or not a peach tree will grow from the peach pit. |
#3
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Peach Trees From Pits?
On Wed, 4 Jun 2003 20:50:22 -0400, "Jo-Ann" wrote:
I have searched the Internet and cannot find information on whether or not a peach tree will grow from the peach pit. Does anyone know about this? If it can be done, how? Search on growing peach seed Plenty of info. |
#4
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Peach Trees From Pits?
Hello, I have searched the Internet and cannot find information on whether or not a peach tree will grow from the peach pit. Does anyone know about this? If it can be done, how? thanks so much. Jo-Ann -- Yes, ther are mor elaborate ways but just plant about an inch deep in good loose soil, they will pop up next spring. Not peahes are grafted trees, seedling will give you an infinite variety of peach types some good some bad, The only constant is that they won;t be the same as the peach from which the seed came |
#5
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Peach Trees From Pits?
Thank you very much for the help. I found a web page thanks to Frogleg ,and
I will try Ann's method which is in the web site. Thank you Farmer Dill too! Jo-Ann "Jo-Ann" wrote in message ... Hello, I have searched the Internet and cannot find information on whether or not a peach tree will grow from the peach pit. Does anyone know about this? If it can be done, how? thanks so much. Jo-Ann -- Invalid address-Please post request to e-mail me. |
#6
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Peach Trees From Pits?
It would take forever. how many years do you expect to live.
"Jo-Ann" wrote in message ... Hello, I have searched the Internet and cannot find information on whether or not a peach tree will grow from the peach pit. Does anyone know about this? If it can be done, how? thanks so much. Jo-Ann -- Invalid address-Please post request to e-mail me. |
#7
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Peach Trees From Pits?
On Sun, 08 Jun 2003 01:43:44 GMT, "Tim B" wrote:
It would take forever. how many years do you expect to live. "Jo-Ann" wrote in message ... I have searched the Internet and cannot find information on whether or not a peach tree will grow from the peach pit. Does anyone know about this? If it can be done, how? Nonsense. Many fruit trees reach bearing age in 3-5 years, incl. peaches. |
#8
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Peach Trees From Pits?
"Jo-Ann" wrote in message
... Hello, I have searched the Internet and cannot find information on whether or not a peach tree will grow from the peach pit. Does anyone know about this? If it can be done, how? thanks so much. Jo-Ann "Tim B" wrote: It would take forever. how many years do you expect to live. Wrong. For the past 23 years, we've been harvesting some of the nicest peaches I've ever tasted, produced by a tree grown from a pit. If Jo-Ann plans to live more than another 3 or 4 years she'll have to take her chances on the quality of the fruit but, she will be harvesting peaches from her tree grown from a pit. Ross, Ontario, Canada. New AgCanada Zone 5b 43º19' North 80º16' West |
#9
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Peach Trees From Pits?
It would take forever. how many years do you expect to live.
We've got a peach tree in our front yard. It's about 5 feet tall and has about 40 peaches on it right now. It took about 5 years to grow it from a pit and the 5 peaches (its first fruit) we got last year were tasty. Go ahead and try something new! Its not like its a real expensive project. If you don't have the time to spend waiting for the pit, you can pay someone who did to sell you one of his..... But I thought it was the journey that mattered. Jack |
#11
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Peach Trees From Pits?
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#12
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Peach Trees From Pits?
right on, i made a "air cutting" where I packed a new branch in peat and wired
it off about 5 years ago, and it's bearing this spring. Ok, maybe "forever" i planted it when starting my degree, and it's bearing now! perception is reality. john |
#13
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Peach Trees From Pits?
and if the fruit is no good, the wood of the tree is a hell of a way to smoke
some fowl or do a bbq this summer. And it won't even need seasoning, just wet so that the fire never gets too hot. on top of a bed of charcoal, you'll love the taste. Or short of that, the birds don't really seem to care, and neiter do the squirrels. there is something to be said for that too. |
#14
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Peach Trees From Pits?
That may be true. But how many run-of-the-mill pits have to brown into trees
before you get a tree with fruit that works in your area and which you are willing to consume? Bill Having been a child of the depression, I have done hundreds of peach pit trees, Never had one where the peaches were inedible to the point where I was not willing to consume them. If the tree starts off well, they will be vigorous enough, of couse some will have small fruits ( we use to call them plum peaches and pickle them whole), many be clingstone, and flavor and texture will have wide variance, If you want a specific peach, yes buy a grafted tree. You can graft onto the seedlings but bought trees utilized special grafting stock which is more disease resistant. If you like variety and the surprise prize then starting trees from pits can be fun. We did it because we were too poor to buy trees, although I still occasionally stick peach pits in a flower bed and grow out a seedling or two, just to remind me from whence I came. |
#15
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Peach Trees From Pits?
On Sun, 08 Jun 2003 19:01:20 GMT, Repeating Decimal
wrote: Frogleg wrote on 6/8/03 4:48 AM: Nonsense. Many fruit trees reach bearing age in 3-5 years, incl. peaches. That may be true. But how many run-of-the-mill pits have to brown into trees before you get a tree with fruit that works in your area and which you are willing to consume? The OP didn't ask about securing an ideal fruit tree for her particular location and tastes, but simply wanted to know if you could grow a peach tree from seed. As it turns out, (thanks for the info, Mr. Dill) peach seeds seem to produce rather more useful trees than apples, which are fascinatingly random. The poster (unquoted here) who seemed to think growing a producing fruit tree was a multi-generational process was wrong. |
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