I have 26 varieties of Figs trees which have fruit May thru November. Citrus starts ripening December thru March. Five varieties of bananas that ripen on their own time line, any time of the year. Loquats ripen February to March. Apricot that ripen in June. Six varieties of Nectarines that ripen May thru September. So there are different fruit ripening pretty much every month of the year, but it takes years for these different trees to mature to the stage where these trees give you a full production.
You previously mentioned a goal of having ripe fruit in your yard year-round. What are the most challenging months? What trees could be a solution?
I have 26 varieties of Figs trees which have fruit May thru November. Citrus starts ripening December thru March. Five varieties of bananas that ripen on their own time line, any time of the year. Loquats ripen February to March. Apricot that ripen in June. Six varieties of Nectarines that ripen May thru September. So there are different fruit ripening pretty much every month of the year, but it takes years for these different trees to mature to the stage where these trees give you a full production.
@@edibletropicaltrees Looks like figs and nectarines are key for the hottest months. Good info 👍
South Phoenix.
Where did you buy this tree from?
Thanks for watching. Treeland and Summerwinds are nurseries nearby one another. I recommend both.
You mean meiwa kumquat?
Thanks for watching. There are several varieties of Kumquat, this one is Kishu
@@edibletropicaltrees no information on such variety, I google it