Growing Tangerines And Exploring Grafting In Your Kitchen Garden
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You can expand the number of excellent fruit trees in your indoor or outdoor garden. One of the simplest fruit plants to maintain is a tangerine tree, particularly if you know how to take care of it. Planting a tangerine tree in a medium- or large-sized container, or possibly in a sunny garden corner, can yield sweet and tasty fruit that resembles oranges.

The tangerine tree can reach a height of 8 metres, but it also adds flair to your patio or garden and provides fruit. Tangerine trees typically reach heights of 3 or 4 metres. Taking proper care of your tangerine tree will provide you with years of organic fruits and lots of shade in the summer. Good soil, sun, and water are also necessary.

Discover the right ways to develop tangerine trees and some helpful hints for taking good care of them. Find out more.

Tips To Remember While Growing Tangerines 

Placement, Light, And Temperature

Select a full-sun position if you're planting a new tangerine tree in your garden or a big pot. Warm tropical and subtropical regions are ideal for cultivating tangerine trees. Fruit from a healthy, well-grown tree that gets regular shade and adequate sunlight will look better yearly.

Tree Watering

Depending on the location of your tree, you can water it twice a week as it gets older and more established. A tree with less shelter and more sunlight would need more water.

Soil

You want your tangerine tree to grow as quickly and healthily as possible. Therefore, it's critical that the soil drains well and has a proper pH balance. Fortunately, choosing the right soil for these trees isn't too tough because most tangerine trees can thrive in almost any potting soil.

How To Maintain Your Tangerine Tree?

Despite minimal maintenance, tangerine trees sometimes need to be pruned. When pruning and tending to your tangerine tree, look for withered leaves and remove any dead branches.

To ensure that your tree may expand extensively during the summer, begin pruning it in the early or mid-spring. To remove complete limbs, make cuts outside the branch collar. Don't forget to trim around 0.5 cm away from a leaf node or bud at a 25-degree angle.

Fruits & Blooming

You'll first notice that tangerine plants take two to three years to begin bearing fruit if they are smaller and younger. These fruits are comparable to oranges, but they are typically much juicier because of their smaller size and thinner peel. Eliminate any fruit borne before its third year of growth—this is useful advice to keep in mind. This enables the tree to focus its developing energy on stronger, longer-lasting roots.

Although tangerines are generally soft and fragile, you may occasionally see the peel popping and shattering. This happens when the tree experiences a drought during the fruit-bearing season, so giving your plant enough water is crucial as the fruits begin to grow.

A Mixed Graft Citrus Tree: What Is It?

For gardeners with large goals but limited area, citrus trees bearing multiple fruits, also called fruit salad citrus trees, are an excellent option.

Most commercial fruit trees result from budding or grafting; the fruit and branches originate from a different kind of tree, while the rootstock is from another. This enables gardeners to cultivate climate-adapted roots and fruit from a tree that may not be, despite various environmental factors (cold, disease susceptibility, dryness, etc.).

There's no need to stop there, even though most trees are sold with just one kind of tree grafted onto the rootstock. Certain nurseries sell numerous grafted citrus plants.