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   Get It Growing
 Home>News Archive>2013>February>Get It Growing>

Homegrown fresh fruit is delicious

For Release On Or After 02/08/13

By Dan Gill
LSU AgCenter Horticulturist

February is a great time to plant hardy fruit trees, bushes or vines in your landscape. Local nurseries should have an excellent selection newly arrived for planting in late winter and early spring.

Pay careful attention to selection, planting, growing conditions and necessary care.

As a rule, plants we grow for fruit require full sun, excellent drainage and room to grow. Find out the mature size and proper spacing of the fruits you want to grow, and take all of this into consideration when locating them in your landscape.

The varieties of fruits you choose must be adapted to the mild winters of the Deep South. Always check that the required chilling hours the fruit you are considering will be satisfied by the temperatures you normally get in your area. Chilling hours are the accumulated hours below 45 degrees that occur during winter. This will vary depending on where you garden in the state – north Louisiana gets more chilling hours than south Louisiana.

You also must know whether the fruit you want to grow is self-fruitful or requires a pollinator. Self-fruitful plants will pollinate themselves, and you only need to plant one. Plants that require a pollinator will not pollinate themselves, and another plant of the same type of fruit, but a different variety, must be planted for cross-pollination and reliable production.

The fig is one of the most commonly planted and easily grown fruit trees in our state. The Celeste fig is the variety most gardeners grow because of its reliability. Other good fig varieties for Louisiana include Southeastern Brown Turkey (fruit similar to Celeste but more prone to splitting and souring), Florentine (large, yellow fruit), LSU Purple (medium-size reddish to dark purple fruit) and LSU Gold (large yellow fruit).

Fruiting pears produce beautiful displays of white flowers in February and delicious fruit in August. Pineapple is a popular variety for its quality fruit – it’s better for cooking than fresh eating – and resistance to fire blight. Other pears to consider include Baldwin, Garber, Orient, Kieffer, Biscamp and LeConte. It is best to plant two different varieties to ensure pollination and good fruit production.

Japanese persimmons are low-maintenance fruit trees that rarely, if ever, need to be sprayed. The major problem is fruit drop, which is generally worst the first five years after you plant the tree and then improves as the tree matures. Recommended Japanese persimmons include Taninashi, Hachiya (harvest these two varieties when the fruit is very soft), Tamopan, Fuyu and Suruga (these three varieties are non-astringent and can be eaten when the flesh is crisp). You need only one tree for production.

In areas of the state with acid soils, blueberry bushes are excellent for small gardens because they stay much smaller than most fruit trees. Recommend varieties include Tifblue, Woodard, Climax, Premier and Choice. You also can plant Southern highbush blueberry varieties, such as Cooper, Gulfcrest, Blue Ridge and Cape Fear. Blueberries are self-fruitful, but planting more than one variety improves production and quality.

Blackberries – or brambles – are relatively carefree to grow with the major task being annual pruning after harvest. Trailing types, such as boysenberries, dewberries and youngberries, must be trained to a trellis or other support. Erect types include Navaho and Arapaho (these two are thornless), as well as Brazos, Shawnee and Rosborough. Blackberries are self-fruitful.

Citrus trees are commonly planted in south Louisiana (although adventurous gardeners in north Louisiana are giving them a try these days) and are self-fruitful. Easily grown, citrus have a variety of pest problems, but none is generally too bad.

Muscadine grapes are native to our area and require a moderate amount of maintenance. The vines require support, and the annual pruning, in which up to 90 percent of the previous year’s grow is removed, can be quite a chore. Self-fertile types can be planted individually and include Carlos, Cowart (considered one of the best), Dearing, Magnolia and Southland. Pistilate (female) varieties, such as Fry, Higgins, Scuppernong, Hunt and Jumbo, must be planted with a self-fertile variety close by for pollination.

Higher-maintenance fruits include apples, plums, peaches, bunch grapes and nectarines. These fruit trees, more than those already mentioned, generally require more pruning and spraying to successfully produce here.

I am sometimes asked about growing cherries, raspberries and apricots in Louisiana. Unfortunately, no varieties of these fruits are reliable producers this far south.

For more information on home fruit production, including the recommended fruit varieties for Louisiana, contact your parish LSU AgCenter office and request a free copy of “The Louisiana Home Orchard” publication.

Rick Bogren
Last Updated: 1/29/2013 10:05:22 AM

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