bizarre behaviour of citrus trees
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on โ21-07-2014 11:36 PM
I have an orange tree and a lemon tree in close proximity about 20 years old. Every year they've yielded lots of lumpy misshapen (but very tasty) lemons from May to October and a few sour oranges in summer. This year they are bewitched, I picked 2 kilos of oranges this week with heaps left almost ripe and also quite a few unripe what appear to be mandarins. The lemon tree is almost bare of ripe lemons but there is heaps of green fruit that should be ready around November to December. I'm in Perth WA, any ideas?
bizarre behaviour of citrus trees
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on โ21-07-2014 11:42 PM
Can't explain it but I'm in Perth too.
bizarre behaviour of citrus trees
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on โ21-07-2014 11:51 PM
Have you had regular rain? Lots of rain?
Citrus like to have regular water
bizarre behaviour of citrus trees
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on โ22-07-2014 12:05 AM
I think we have had really good rain this year Stawka. I'm not sure the BOM would say the same. Bucketing down this afternoon.
bizarre behaviour of citrus trees
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on โ22-07-2014 12:17 AM
bizarre behaviour of citrus trees

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on โ22-07-2014 12:28 AM
Have you changed your watering regime at all (if you even had one)?
Despite reports, the rain this year came at the right time for citrus I think ....... fantastic Washington navels, lemon tree branches weighed down, not only with huge ripe lemons but also green ones still coming through and a mandarin tree whose cropping has never been better.
What sort of soil do you have - that could provide an explanation.
Have you fed them at all through the year?
bizarre behaviour of citrus trees
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on โ22-07-2014 12:49 AM
thanks for all your replies. We have limestone rock and sand, I never ever water or feed them as we are very low lying almost in the wetlands and yes we have had heaps of rain this year so that may well be the answer. Now how to explain the apparent mandarins on the orange tree
bizarre behaviour of citrus trees

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โ22-07-2014 12:53 AM - edited โ22-07-2014 12:54 AM
Are the oranges and the suspected mandarins on the same branches?
Could it possibly be a graft you were unaware of that has produced 'out of the blue'?
Are the oranges navels and if so, have you cut open one of the suspect fruit to see if it has any pips?
Edited to add that the seasons have been all over the place the past year and that could account for the differing cropping at least
bizarre behaviour of citrus trees
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on โ22-07-2014 08:55 AM
bizarre behaviour of citrus trees
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on โ22-07-2014 09:39 AM

