Photo Credit
Pixabay
Subhead
A Complete Guide to Growing Delicious Peaches at Home
Read Next
Types
- ‘Redhaven’, which is the standard and most popular choice. These peaches are medium-size, but can be small if the tree is not properly thinned. Its skin is tough and firm and red in color.
- ‘Reliance’, which is a hardy variety. It produces small and soft fruits.
- ‘Harmony’ (‘Canadian Harmony’), which is winter hardy and moderately resistant to bacterial leaf spot. It produces medium to large fruit and freezes well.
- Some zone favorites are:
| Zone | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
| Variety | Hale | Madison | Saturn | Contender | Frost | Topaz | Florida Beauty |
Gardening Products
More Like This
I also have the same problem with my peach trees. We bought our place 10 years ago. Plenty of blooms, really small peachs that never grow or ripen. Not sure about pruning or any thing concerned with peach trees.I live in southeast georgia. Need help
Kay and Dave, Nothing good comes easy . . . Peaches, like most plants, require a certain amount of care. (Would that they just produced!) As noted above, they need nitrogen (some sources also say potassium). Check your soil and amend as necessary. Fertilize in spring. Treat with zinc annually. Also, make sure your peach tree gets lots of sun and air circulation. As much as these plants love water, excessive dampness (even fog!) can lead to bacteria and so black spot. Air and sun, with proper pruning will help to enable them to dry out. If you can't employ these tactics this year, plan to next year.
Another consideration for you, as noted above: remove the tiny peaches to allow 1 to grow per 8 to 10 inches of branch. That might improve the development of the remainders.
I am renting a property that has several peach trees; I have no idea how mature they are, but a few are over 6 ft tall and they do not have the open bowl pruning. Last year I had an abundance of young fruits that never matured, I was so disappointed! How do I avoid this again, what do I do to encourage ripening? One of my trees is full of peaches and they are tiny but turning the lovely reddish orange color. The other trees have peaches, but they are still just green. Any suggestions are most welcome, I am new to this.
The best way to ensure ripening and adequate size is to thin the peaches quite severely: rub off the peachlets, keeping one well-placed peach per 10 inches or so. It depends on the branch structure as well. If there are many small fruiting branches, then consider keeping one peach per branch. For wall-trained friuit, facing up towards maturity is also advised: that is to say, slip something behind the peach (carefully), just to make it stand out to the sun a bit more. Beware of birds too, and ensure a regular watering.
my boyfriend told me to prune the fruit of the tree that is about 5 years old. stand about 6 foot. He thinks the it is still to young. It has never beard fruit until this year when I bought another tree.
should I cut the fruit off for I donot believe that the branches are going to handle it
You should say--or write--It has never borne fruit, not beard fruit.
Hi,
I had purchased few fruit trees in summer, Cheery, Peach, Plum, Avacado, pomegranate etc. However, didn't get chance to plant them right away. I am ready now. In Bay area so weather is not cold yet, should I plan them now? Any precaution I should take due to late planting?
Thanks,
M
my mother would let the seeds dry for a day or two and put them in a small pot of soil with the larger part of the seed down and the smaller pointing up then replant them after they were big enough. hope this helps
When do you plant a seed from a Peach?
Thanks
John
- « Previous
- 1
- 2
- …
- 10
- Next »


Comments