JeffB wrote:The calamansi I bought around Xmas last year and have had in my yard since May is lousy with fruit and falling over under their groaning weight. The tree is about 5 feet tall and the "trunk" is probably an inch in diameter. Currently it's supported by a fence and a thin metal rod. I grew up around citrus, but none of our orange, lemon or grapefruit trees bore so much fruit so quickly and this was never an issue I dealt with as a youngster. Shall I cull or just add more support?
Cathy2 wrote:JeffB wrote:The calamansi I bought around Xmas last year and have had in my yard since May is lousy with fruit and falling over under their groaning weight. The tree is about 5 feet tall and the "trunk" is probably an inch in diameter. Currently it's supported by a fence and a thin metal rod. I grew up around citrus, but none of our orange, lemon or grapefruit trees bore so much fruit so quickly and this was never an issue I dealt with as a youngster. Shall I cull or just add more support?
Hi,
Don't you need to harvest and bring it inside? I am quite impressed by your experience, where did you get this tree?
Regards,
bean wrote:I'd be curious to see what pickled limes the size of caper berries would be like.
JeffB wrote:I can heartily recommend a calamansi/calamondin for the space you have described. I bought one a few Decembers ago at Gethsemane, placed it near a large south-facing window, and have harvested hundreds of the little fruits (about the size of a kumquat, a closely related fruit). The thin-skinned orange globes are sometimes called Filipino limes and they have a bracing, bitter taste that I think hits notes from tangerine, lime and Seville orange. They are often used in marmalades, and I have made terrific syrups, bitters, and calamondin liqueur (calamoncello?). It improves a dark and stormy quite a bit, in my view. It's a great ceviche acid, and calamondin cake is an old Florida cracker thing. Gethsemane’s citrus ain’t cheap, but you get what you pay for and the guys there know citrus. I’ve found the tree to be very hearty, needing little water in the winter but doing well outside in the heat and wet of summer. It is usually either flowering or fruiting, both of which smell great. One of my favorite reminders of Florida. Look for this as a cocktail ingredient soon.
http://articles.latimes.com/2012/aug/14 ... t-20120813