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[email protected] 05-02-2008 10:45 PM

What happened to my Lime tree?
 
I do not know too much about my Lime trees because they were planted
by a previous owner. However, I have 2 of them. My tree in the front
made lots of Limes this year. My tree in the backyard didn't make any
Limes, however it produced one orange. An orange. Probably
originating from the orange trees in some of my neighbor's yards. We
live in Florida. I ate the orange, it was really very tasty. But what
happened to all of the Limes? I don't get it. We did have some frost
this year and I had some plants that died. But why would the lime tree
still be able to produce an orange? Maybe someone can help me with
this Lime tree. Thanks.








Need a garden Gnome? You know you do.
http://www.skyecrafts.com

symplastless 06-02-2008 12:59 AM

What happened to my Lime tree?
 

wrote in message
...
I do not know too much about my Lime trees because they were planted
by a previous owner.

Most likely planted too deep.

However, I have 2 of them. My tree in the front
made lots of Limes this year. My tree in the backyard didn't make any
Limes, however it produced one orange. An orange. Probably
originating from the orange trees in some of my neighbor's yards. We
live in Florida. I ate the orange, it was really very tasty. But what
happened to all of the Limes? I don't get it. We did have some frost
this year and I had some plants that died. But why would the lime tree
still be able to produce an orange? Maybe someone can help me with
this Lime tree. Thanks.


I planted peach trees once and they produced apples?


--
Sincerely,
John A. Keslick, Jr.
Consulting Forester & Tree Expert
http://home.ccil.org/~treeman
and www.treedictionary.com
Beware of so-called tree experts who do not understand tree biology.
Storms, fires, floods, earthquakes, and volcanic eruptions keep reminding us
that we are not the boss.









Need a garden Gnome? You know you do.
http://www.skyecrafts.com




David Hare-Scott 06-02-2008 02:06 AM

What happened to my Lime tree?
 

wrote in message
...
I do not know too much about my Lime trees because they were planted
by a previous owner. However, I have 2 of them. My tree in the front
made lots of Limes this year. My tree in the backyard didn't make any
Limes, however it produced one orange. An orange. Probably
originating from the orange trees in some of my neighbor's yards. We
live in Florida. I ate the orange, it was really very tasty. But what
happened to all of the Limes? I don't get it. We did have some frost
this year and I had some plants that died. But why would the lime tree
still be able to produce an orange? Maybe someone can help me with
this Lime tree. Thanks.



I would say the obvious answer is most likely correct. You don't have two
lime trees.

David



David E. Ross 06-02-2008 02:30 AM

What happened to my Lime tree?
 
On 2/5/2008 2:45 PM, wrote:
I do not know too much about my Lime trees because they were planted
by a previous owner. However, I have 2 of them. My tree in the front
made lots of Limes this year. My tree in the backyard didn't make any
Limes, however it produced one orange. An orange. Probably
originating from the orange trees in some of my neighbor's yards. We
live in Florida. I ate the orange, it was really very tasty. But what
happened to all of the Limes? I don't get it. We did have some frost
this year and I had some plants that died. But why would the lime tree
still be able to produce an orange? Maybe someone can help me with
this Lime tree. Thanks.


If the tree in back really was a lime, it might have been grafted to
orange root stock. Then, if growth above the graft point died, only the
root stock remained alive to produce new growth (oranges in this case).
That is the second most likely explanation.

The first most likely explanation was suggested by Hare-Scott. You had
only one lime tree. If your neighbors have orange trees, it's possible
a seed from one of their fruits sprouted in your yard.

What definitely did not happen is that pollen from a neighbor's tree
caused the lime tree to produce an orange. Even when there is
cross-pollination, the fruit always reflects the plant on which it
grows. The results of cross-pollination appear only in plants grown
from the resulting seeds.

--
David E. Ross
Climate: California Mediterranean
Sunset Zone: 21 -- interior Santa Monica Mountains with some ocean
influence (USDA 10a, very close to Sunset Zone 19)
Gardening pages at http://www.rossde.com/garden/


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