I have had for five years a Tahitian lime tree which grows vigorously and needs regular trimming down to tame it. Every year it starts with hundreds of tiny fruit, but they all fall off within weeks. I have literally ended up with two limes this year, it seems far more happy with growing leaves. Someone told me there may be too much nitrogen in the soil, and most citrus foods also have a lot of nitrogen so I shouldn't use them. I am having trouble finding alternatives however and am not sure that is the answer anyway. Does anyone have any ideas?
Thanks for this advice my Eureka lemon tree of 4 years is loving it
Thank you for subcribe #lekhtube
Awesome
Thanks that's awesome!
I live in Canada, if we had your weather I’d have fruit trees everywhere, youare so lucky, cheers.
A
The lemon is a Meyer (not a male).
listern more carefully that's what he said mayerlemon one word
baking.cakes
how do you get of black mould on the leaves
Trim the affected branches back to stop the spread if it's only on a few of them.
@@RatelHBadger MPP
U are handsome & smart 💜💙
Tamlj.ovie
I have had for five years a Tahitian lime tree which grows vigorously and needs regular trimming down to tame it. Every year it starts with hundreds of tiny fruit, but they all fall off within weeks. I have literally ended up with two limes this year, it seems far more happy with growing leaves. Someone told me there may be too much nitrogen in the soil, and most citrus foods also have a lot of nitrogen so I shouldn't use them. I am having trouble finding alternatives however and am not sure that is the answer anyway. Does anyone have any ideas?
Try Epsom salts.
They don't last as long as the food but may help give it a quick feed.
Tie with aluminum wire tightly main trunk but above in the soil