GardenBanter.co.uk

GardenBanter.co.uk (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/)
-   United Kingdom (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/united-kingdom/)
-   -   Pomegranate (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/united-kingdom/207423-pomegranate.html)

Bob Hobden 14-06-2013 08:47 AM

Pomegranate
 
A few years on and our Pomegranate shrub, 7ft tall, has a number of flower
buds on it. I understood that it was unusual for them to flower in the UK
and I certainly would not have expected it after last years bad summer.
Don't hold out any chance of fruit but how are others doing?

-- Regards
Bob Hobden
Posting to this Newsgroup
from the W.of London. UK


Jeff Layman[_2_] 14-06-2013 09:03 AM

Pomegranate
 
On 14/06/2013 08:47, Bob Hobden wrote:
A few years on and our Pomegranate shrub, 7ft tall, has a number of flower
buds on it. I understood that it was unusual for them to flower in the UK
and I certainly would not have expected it after last years bad summer.
Don't hold out any chance of fruit but how are others doing?


Pomegranates don't seem to have a problem flowering in the UK. There
used to be a couple of 2m+ double-flowered pomegranate bushes near the
abbey ruins in Lesnes Abbey Park garden (SE London) which flowered well
every year. But that was in the 90s, and I haven't been there for many
years.

But AFAIK pomegranates don't fruit in the UK.

--

Jeff

Sacha[_10_] 14-06-2013 09:47 AM

Pomegranate
 
On 2013-06-14 08:47:51 +0100, Bob Hobden said:

A few years on and our Pomegranate shrub, 7ft tall, has a number of
flower buds on it. I understood that it was unusual for them to flower
in the UK and I certainly would not have expected it after last years
bad summer. Don't hold out any chance of fruit but how are others doing?

-- Regards
Bob Hobden
Posting to this Newsgroup
from the W.of London. UK


The ex in-laws had one in Jersey that flowered regularly but never
fruited. I think theirs was a miniature variety but my memory is of a
long time ago. From what I recall, they lost it in an unusually hard
winter. But while they do flower in warm, sheltered gardens, I've never
heard of one fruiting. Perhaps others will know if they do, though. I
think they're absolutely beautiful trees.
--

Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.com
South Devon
www.helpforheroes.org.uk


Pam Moore[_2_] 14-06-2013 12:16 PM

Pomegranate
 
On Fri, 14 Jun 2013 08:47:51 +0100, "Bob Hobden"
wrote:

A few years on and our Pomegranate shrub, 7ft tall, has a number of flower
buds on it. I understood that it was unusual for them to flower in the UK
and I certainly would not have expected it after last years bad summer.
Don't hold out any chance of fruit but how are others doing?

-- Regards
Bob Hobden
Posting to this Newsgroup
from the W.of London. UK


I have a sort of bonsai one in a pot which has died back a lot in the
last few winters. It has never yet flowered although I've had it
(grown from a pip) for about 25 years I live in hope! I used to have a
miniature one (nana) which flowered regularly, but it is no longer
with me!

Pam in Bristol

RustyHinge 15-06-2013 10:35 AM

Pomegranate
 
On 14/06/13 08:47, Bob Hobden wrote:
A few years on and our Pomegranate shrub, 7ft tall, has a number of
flower buds on it. I understood that it was unusual for them to flower
in the UK and I certainly would not have expected it after last years
bad summer. Don't hold out any chance of fruit but how are others doing?


The winter killed mine.

It also killed a small bay tree, a mature potato vine, the best part of
a peach tree and has severely cut-back my Brown Turkey

--
Rusty Hinge

[email protected] 15-06-2013 11:49 AM

Pomegranate
 
In article ,
RustyHinge wrote:
On 14/06/13 08:47, Bob Hobden wrote:
A few years on and our Pomegranate shrub, 7ft tall, has a number of
flower buds on it. I understood that it was unusual for them to flower
in the UK and I certainly would not have expected it after last years
bad summer. Don't hold out any chance of fruit but how are others doing?


The winter killed mine.


A previous one killed mine - they are far tougher than the books
say, but definitely not hardy.

It also killed a small bay tree, a mature potato vine, the best part of
a peach tree and has severely cut-back my Brown Turkey


That's sad. How well does your soil drain? Of those, the only one
thap happened here was the last - and you don't kill a fig by cutting
it back hard!

I lost a thyme, hyssop and most of my ancient winter savory, but
they don't like wet.


Regards,
Nick Maclaren.

RustyHinge 16-06-2013 10:41 AM

Pomegranate
 
On 15/06/13 11:49, wrote:

/short list of deceased or winter-mauled shrubs/

That's sad. How well does your soil drain? Of those, the only one
thap happened here was the last - and you don't kill a fig by cutting
it back hard!


Didn't have enough water for drowning, and the soil does drain, though
it's rather heavy.

Howsomedever, we had a prolonged period of temperatures below -15°C, and
down to -19°C one star-spangled night.

--
Rusty Hinge

[email protected] 16-06-2013 12:19 PM

Pomegranate
 
In article ,
RustyHinge wrote:
On 15/06/13 11:49, wrote:

/short list of deceased or winter-mauled shrubs/

That's sad. How well does your soil drain? Of those, the only one
thap happened here was the last - and you don't kill a fig by cutting
it back hard!


Didn't have enough water for drowning, and the soil does drain, though
it's rather heavy.

Howsomedever, we had a prolonged period of temperatures below -15°C, and
down to -19°C one star-spangled night.


A potato vine is killed by less than that, and I am surprised
that mine has survived - though it has been cut right down.
If the bay is dead, rather than just cut down to the roots,
I suspect that wet has more to do with it - well, probably the
alternation of cold and wet.


Regards,
Nick Maclaren.

RustyHinge 22-06-2013 06:58 PM

Pomegranate
 
On 16/06/13 12:19, wrote:

A potato vine is killed by less than that, and I am surprised
that mine has survived - though it has been cut right down.


Mine survived a few years, but I don't think it's going to come back,
even though some of the stems *look* viable.

If the bay is dead, rather than just cut down to the roots,
I suspect that wet has more to do with it - well, probably the
alternation of cold and wet.


We shall see if it's dead dead - it certainly is from the ground up.
It's on a pretty well-drained bit of soil, so waterlogging is very unlikely.

--
Rusty Hinge


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:15 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter