Growing Citrus in the Arizona Desert

Published 2021-03-09
Growing Citrus doesn't need to be hard. This video shows a few simple tips to get tons of fruit in the desert south west.

All Comments (17)
  • @SippingTea2x
    This is exactly what I want when I move to Arizona. Citrus fruit trees & a chicken coop. Love the info ❤
  • @anthroman7963
    Great video! I love the way you have pruned your citrus trees. Also, it's important to not let your citrus tree have leaves that touch the ground. It gives pest an opportunity to climb up the tree and wreck havoc
  • @salazar3451
    Queen creek used to have the best oranges by Ellsworth and cloud rd behind orchard ranch. I lived there my whole childhood on the farm next door.
  • @espartaco2028
    Thank you so very much for the reach around and subscribing. I truly enjoy the level of detail and delivery in your videos and wish you nothing but success in health and wealth. Honestly? I didn't know my butthole from a snakehole two years ago when staring my "orchard" on my 1/2 acre. The smartest thing I did was start with strong, healthy, larger citrus. I have a Eureka lemon, Ruby Red GF, four Japanese variant Tangerines and a red navel orange. I planted them in an even mix of local sand (that's all there is here) with Black cow. I layered 2' of woodchips over the entire 1/2 acre and covered that with 2' of oak, pine and maple leaves. Up until this year, I watered everyday in the growing season, which was a mistake. Mistakes? I've made plenty of those. I have learned two pieces of wisdom, one borrowed, one my own. Bayer Advanced citrus product to prevent Greening. Couldn't have citrus without it here. The other is Citrus are too willing to please! Don't allow a young tree to fruit! It's bad, the fruit isn't good, just don't do it. Very hard to have that level of discipline and patience but, only disappointment awaits. The one Tangerine I did have fruit on which was way too young was split in half because of it! Not cool. Thanks again!!
  • @danielfisch655
    Loved the history lesson, great information, we use IV Organics and thank you for sharing.
  • @JZ-gr1tz
    Looks like they don't make him a lot of Orsnje Juices or lemonade must. Of it are standing in tree . Still proven that in small place look at thriving Oranges a lot 🍋 as well hens eggs
  • @jadrianson3360
    Thank you for the video! I am not sure why we do not amend out soils with sand and lava rock more often(plants don’t have a circulatory system for air transport like humans & roots must breaths as well, lava rock and sand added to clay make the medium more permeable. No one talks about all the free nitrogen in our atmosphere!!!! Get the air based nitrogen down to the roots after irrigation with soil amendments like sand and lava rock!! Also good idea on going organic from this point forward. The organic fruit produced will have much more immunity defending compounds and be much more satiating in my opinion. I do a lot of chop and drop for green mulching (nitrogen), add rich compost, and have been making and adding bio-char as well
  • @gr8rubs
    Great advice. I live in Las Vegas and am considering planting some kind of citrus tree. Any recommendations on how to get that Arizona sour orange rootstock?
  • Totally new here so I have a question that may seem ridiculous to you but here it goes... when talking about root stalk, does that mean to buy locally grown items?
  • @bmo6475
    I'm new to this and in the CA high desert is there any books you recommend on desert gardening
  • @katieshort6904
    Can I retrain a mature citrus tree (lollipop syle) to grow as a bush?
  • I need your heeeeelllllpppp! I’m in San Tan Valley as well and this is my first year growing citrus. Moved from the Midwest and I am struggling. Can you help me out?