Tips about the way to Plant, Broaden, Prune, and Harvest Citrus

Tips about the way to Plant, Broaden, Prune, and Harvest Citrus

Citrus—oranges, lemons, limes, grapefruits, and kumquats—thrive outdoors where summers are warm and winters are mild. But citrus is not only for warm climates. Citrus fruits can be grown in cool regions in pots or planters that can sit outdoors in warm weather and be moved indoors in cool weather. Citrus fruits take months to ripen—six

Tips on how to Plant, Expand, Prune, and Harvest Currants

Tips on how to Plant, Expand, Prune, and Harvest Currants

Currants are small, round berry-like fruits that can be eaten fresh or cooked with sugar and made into pie fillings, puddings, dessert sauces, jams, and jellies. There are red, white–actually yellowish-white, and black-fruited currants. Currants grow as bushes to about 6 feet tall. They grow best in cool-summer regions and seldom thrive in warm-summer regions

How you’ll be able to Plant, Broaden, and Harvest Feijoa Pineapple Guava

How you’ll be able to Plant, Broaden, and Harvest Feijoa Pineapple Guava

Young pineapple guava fruit Feijo, also called pineapple guava, is a small oval fruit with smooth, gray-green skin and creamy white flesh that is juicy and pearlike. The flavor of feijoa is sweet and reminiscent of pineapple, pear, and banana. Feijo fruit resembles unripe medium-size guava from a distance. The fruit is 2½ inches long