- Jul 11, 2001
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There were a couple dwarf peach trees in the back yard a few decades ago but they died, one by one. Used to can them (jars), which worked out great.
Recently, rarely buy peaches in the market, just stick to my usual: Bananas, apples, oranges.
After carpal tunnel surgery 3 weeks ago, stopped riding bike (can't), so walked to get my stitches out. On way home, pass a dwarf peach tree on a street I've probably never been on. Notice the poor tree has terrible peach leaf curl. There were many tiny peaches on the sidewalk, most look awful but I pick up one that had only a little bruise and held it the rest of the way home (~2 miles) in my good hand. Washed and ate it first thing when home. Started thinking. What if I plant the pit where the last one died, will I have another dwarf peach tree in the back yard? The pit is tiny, about the size of one of those largish marbles. I bury it an inch or two deep in potting soil in a small plastic pot, water, and do some research a couple days later and realize I have to do more. Need to wash the pit, let it dry several days, carefully crack open the pit and remove the interior almond-like seed. Then germinate it, then plant it and go from there. There's stuff online. It's ready to crack now. There's a fair chance it won't be much of a producing tree if I do this. I don't know if it will be a dwarf even. Would probably get best results planting something else and grafting, a video had me thinking. Could buy something potted at a local nursery, but another video suggested to me that you never know what a particular peach tree is going to be like because every tree (seed) is different genetically. Comments?
Recently, rarely buy peaches in the market, just stick to my usual: Bananas, apples, oranges.
After carpal tunnel surgery 3 weeks ago, stopped riding bike (can't), so walked to get my stitches out. On way home, pass a dwarf peach tree on a street I've probably never been on. Notice the poor tree has terrible peach leaf curl. There were many tiny peaches on the sidewalk, most look awful but I pick up one that had only a little bruise and held it the rest of the way home (~2 miles) in my good hand. Washed and ate it first thing when home. Started thinking. What if I plant the pit where the last one died, will I have another dwarf peach tree in the back yard? The pit is tiny, about the size of one of those largish marbles. I bury it an inch or two deep in potting soil in a small plastic pot, water, and do some research a couple days later and realize I have to do more. Need to wash the pit, let it dry several days, carefully crack open the pit and remove the interior almond-like seed. Then germinate it, then plant it and go from there. There's stuff online. It's ready to crack now. There's a fair chance it won't be much of a producing tree if I do this. I don't know if it will be a dwarf even. Would probably get best results planting something else and grafting, a video had me thinking. Could buy something potted at a local nursery, but another video suggested to me that you never know what a particular peach tree is going to be like because every tree (seed) is different genetically. Comments?