Posted by Claude on December 27, 2007, 4:27 am
I have patiently and excitedly waited for my lime tree (in a terracotta pot)
and my lemon tree (young and planted in the ground) to bud and produce
fruit. All was going well, lots of flowers, lots of tiny little limes and
lemons only to see them drop off and disappear! I am very disheartened. Any
tips on why this is happening? I notice the kaffir lime I have nearby is
thriving and producing lots of useless kaffir limes!! :-( I have noticed
some cobwebs on my lime..... any ideas?
Posted by giovani on December 28, 2007, 8:29 am
> > I have patiently and excitedly waited for my lime tree (in a
terracotta pot)
> > and my lemon tree (young and planted in the ground) to bud
and produce
> > fruit. All was going well, lots of flowers, lots of tiny
little limes and
> > lemons only to see them drop off and disappear! I am very
disheartened. Any
> > tips on why this is happening? I notice the kaffir lime I
have nearby is
> > thriving and producing lots of useless kaffir limes!! :-( I
have noticed
> > some cobwebs on my lime..... any ideas?
> I'm afraid it's a natural process -- they set a lot of fruit,
then most of
> them drop off. They are practicing for next year, when I trust
you will get
> some fruit, though not a huge number. Remember that young
plants are still
> establishing themselves and getting the hang of reproduction.
They're
> actually a pair of sullen, spotty teenagers slouching in your
back yard, not
> yet responsible members of society.
Depends on the age of the trees
The same thing will happen with a lack of water ... or perhaps
Too much water
Or even with a lack of bees for fertilisation
The latter is a problem I am facing at the moment
Not only with fruit trees, but also melons, pumpkins and marrows
Forced to artificially cross fertilise manually using male
flowers for the pumpkins
Posted by Claude on December 29, 2007, 7:52 pm
Thanks Chooke and Giovani for the advice (and thanks Chookie for a good
laugh! Spotty teenagers indeed!)
Posted by Jonno on December 29, 2007, 8:00 pm
Claude wrote:
>
> Thanks Chooke and Giovani for the advice (and thanks Chookie for a good
> laugh! Spotty teenagers indeed!)
>
>
While the root system is developing, they do act like spotty teenagers,
but if the tree is kept well fertilised, the acne disappears in some,
letting the fruit hand around to develop properly...
It all spends on the jeans.
Posted by Jonno on December 30, 2007, 6:36 am
Claude wrote:
>
> Thanks Chooke and Giovani for the advice (and thanks Chookie for a good
> laugh! Spotty teenagers indeed!)
>
>
Claude wrote:
>
> Thanks Chooke and Giovani for the advice (and thanks Chookie for a
good laugh! Spotty teenagers indeed!)
>
While the root system is developing, they do act like spotty teenagers,
but if the tree is kept well fertilised, the acne disappears in some,
letting the fruit hang around to develop properly...
It all depends on the jeans.