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sherwindu wrote in
: You can buy a small tree for as little as 15 to 20 dollars and you then know exactly what variety you have. ++++++++++++ I am sorry but I have to 100% disagree with this point. About a dozen years ago, I bought a Navel orange tree to plant in my back yard. I was over-joyed with the delicious oranges that it produced the very first year so I decided to plant two more Navel orange trees. I went to the nursery and checked the stock of citrus trees. Each plant had a label glued onto the pot which declared it to be a Navel orange. Each plant also had a plastic strip wrapped around the trunk saying "Navel Orange" and each plant had a large tag hanging from it with a photograph and planting instructions and specifications and "Navel Orange" declared in large letters. I picked out the two best looking ones and planted them. As soon as they produced fruit I knew something was not right. None of the fruit had navels (Belly Buttons) on them. I watched with interest to see what the ripe fruit would be like when they ripened. One of the trees turned out to be a "Blood Orange". The fruit is small .... just a little bigger than a lemon although it is more spherical in shape than a lemon with juice that is bright red in color. It is tasty but not worth the trouble to eat. The tree is still in my back yard but only because I have not gotten around to digging it up and disposing of it. The other tree was a dissapointment at first because it was not a Navel Orange but it has turned out to be a real treasure. It produces large fruit which has seeds and no Belly Button but it has a characteristic which makes it highly desirable. The fruit ripens between Thanksgiving and Christmas and it stays fresh and delicious hanging on the tree almost the entire year long. I have no idea what type of Orange it is but I am very happy to have it. After this experience I wanted to plant a Seckel Pear. I told the owner of the nursery about my experience with the Navel Oranges and asked, "Are you sure that these trees are Seckel Pears?" He replied, "There is no way to be sure. I had a special order for 200 Seckel pear trees. This is what my supplier shipped to me but you can never know for sure". I do not believe that what I got was a Seckel pear. The fruit does not look like the photos of Seckel pears that I have seen but it is not a bad pear either so I will not complain. My conclusion is this. There is only one sure way to know what you are getting. Plant a seedling for rootstock. Then take a scion from a known tree of the desired type and graph it onto the rootstock. Even then the rootstock selected could possibly have a effect on the finished product. When it comes to apple trees you can buy a 5-in-1 at some nurseries. This is a potted tree with 5 different varieties graphted onto a single rootstock. Let it grow and in later years just prune off the parts that you dont like. Them's my thoughts, PON |
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