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Fruit tree ideas

Posted on 11/15/20 at 2:43 pm
Posted by Geaux1
BR
Member since Oct 2008
1806 posts
Posted on 11/15/20 at 2:43 pm
I live in Baton Rouge area and wanting to add another fruit tree to yard. I Currently have a young satsuma and considering Meyer lemon and or a fig tree. If lemon tree would produce closer to crawfish season I probably would plant one but outside of fresh lemonade I’m not sure what else to do with.

Please post ideas along with brand/variety suggestions
Thanks
Posted by CrawDude
Baton Rouge
Member since Apr 2019
5285 posts
Posted on 11/15/20 at 3:12 pm to
Space for 1 more fruit tree that’s not citrus - fig (Celeste, Brown Turkey, LSU Purple), Japanese Persimmon (Fuyu), perhaps a Loquat (Gold Nugget). Like citrus, none of these require another cultivar (variety) for cross pollination to produce fruit.

You can do Improved Meyer Lemon as well, not as cold hardy as Satsuma, but pretty cold hardy nonetheless. Friend freezes the whole lemons to use when boiling crawfish in the spring.
Posted by Spankum
Miss-sippi
Member since Jan 2007
56106 posts
Posted on 11/15/20 at 3:24 pm to
I have quite a few fruit trees ant my Meyer lemon is my favorite of all. The tree blooms prolifically and the fruit looks beautiful on the tree.
Posted by cgrand
HAMMOND
Member since Oct 2009
38918 posts
Posted on 11/15/20 at 4:02 pm to
loquat (Japanese plum)
beautiful tree, bountiful harvest, maintenance free and no freeze issues.

Posted by Tigerpaw123
Louisiana
Member since Mar 2007
17279 posts
Posted on 11/15/20 at 8:40 pm to
Blueberry bushes
Apple-pear tree
Posted by Bee Man
Hester, LA
Member since Mar 2018
328 posts
Posted on 11/15/20 at 9:41 pm to
Lemons are not very cold hardy.

Persimmon trees are hard to beat. If you’ve never eaten a permission, you’re missing out. They’re much, much better than they look. Fuyu persimmons are non astringent, meaning that you can eat them before they are totally ripe. They just get sweeter and sweeter as they ripen.

Not a tree, but if you have the room, muscadines are really good too.

I’ve never tried them, but jujube trees grow well down here too. They’re said to have an apple flavor, but sweeter.
This post was edited on 11/15/20 at 9:44 pm
Posted by gumbo2176
Member since May 2018
15252 posts
Posted on 11/16/20 at 12:51 pm to
I now only have a fig tree in my back yard and the only issue with them is beating the birds in the morning to pick the ripening figs. Damn birds will peck a hole in one fig, eat just a bit of the sweetest part and head to others to do the same.

Pisses me off to get out there and find 20+ ripening figs ruined by birds right at dawn, but that is how life is with fig trees.

I had a loquat (Japanese Plum) and a satsuma tree that both got killed by Katrina's floodwaters and I never replaced them, but they produced quite a bit of great fruit for me before that.


ETA: I second a persimmon. One of my favorite fruits to eat------when ripe.
This post was edited on 11/16/20 at 12:53 pm
Posted by Clint Torres
Member since Oct 2011
2662 posts
Posted on 11/16/20 at 12:56 pm to
Guy over here in NOLA swears by these Cherries..

LINK
This post was edited on 11/16/20 at 12:58 pm
Posted by Pastalaya
New Orleans
Member since Aug 2012
817 posts
Posted on 11/17/20 at 11:51 pm to
not to hijack but i just received a "Hand of Buddha" citrus plant. I've been looking it up and will try to figure out how to care for this thing. Anyone w/ experience on this?
Posted by Athis
Member since Aug 2016
11705 posts
Posted on 11/18/20 at 2:43 pm to
From my personal experience with fig trees was that they attracted rats. I'll admit I didn't keep up with picking the fruit so that might have had something to do with the rats. If you can pick the fruit before the birds or rats get to them then you are ahead of the game.
Posted by JDGTiger
Louisiana
Member since Oct 2020
650 posts
Posted on 11/20/20 at 3:14 pm to
Evidently there have been some apple trees developed that can grow this far south. They do not need the cold days of traditional apples.

I have been thinking of planting a couple. Florida Extension article
This post was edited on 11/21/20 at 6:38 pm
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