November 14, 2009: O Lemon Tree, O Lemon Tree

Today we drove to Blythe, CA, looking for a Meyer Lemon tree. It's all Thomas' fault. He just had to blog about how to Grow Your Own Citrus, Meyer Lemons. There were a few other things I wanted to pick up at Blythe's Ace Hardware, so I can't blame the entire trip on Thomas. The lemon tree, however, was all that was on Mr. H's mind. I've told the sad tale here before, but it bears repeating.

When we first bought this old place, in the spring of 2004, it had a very pretty oleander hedge, three palo verde trees and two mesquite trees that had been mercilessly mutilated by a former owner, and the lovely palm tree out front. That's the extent of it, as all the rest of the property is natural desert. Well, my next door neighbor decided to replace a small lemon tree on her property with a grapefruit tree, so she dug out the lemon tree and tossed it into the brush pile to be taken to the land fill. I happened to see it there, and rescued the poor thing. It had begun to wilt a bit, but I got it into a bucket of water, then found the perfect spot for it in the front (soon to be) cactus bed. That was in April, and we stayed here until the end of June, painting and renovating to make the place livable and comfortable for the following winter. When we left, I paid a neighbor man to keep everything watered. He did a really good job on the oleanders and the palm tree, and he over watered all the cacti, but the poor little lemon tree didn't survive the summer. Neither did the $75 worth of cacti I had purchased and planted....he drowned the poor things.

The first lemon tree, rescued from the brush pile.

Early in October of 2005, we drove down from Washington to spend the winter. When we arrived, there was a brand new little Meyer lemon tree planted in the garden, a gift from another neighbor. We babied that little tree all winter, and when we left in the spring it had some lovely scented blossoms on it. Again, we hired the neighbor to do our watering, and stressed the necessity to keep the lemon tree watered....and to go very lightly on the water for the second batch of cacti that were thriving when we left. Again, when we arrived in the fall of 2006, most of the cacti and the Meyer lemon had expired. I cannot find a photo of it, I think I was to upset to take a picture.

Undaunted (or can one be just slightly daunted?), I decided to give it just one more try. This time, I fired my water boy, put in underground irrigation lines with bubblers and drip lines, and purchased a timer that could be set for two zones...cactus and oleanders/trees! When we left for Washington, the end of March 2007, the lemon tree looked like this (click to enlarge).....

Add ImageLemon tree #3, March 2007


The cacti flourished, the oleanders were prettier than ever, the palm tree grew bigger and stronger. But the lemon tree died.


Lemon tree #3 October 2007.


It still had some greenish stem, so I bought some good (expen$ive) potting mix and moved it into a large pot. This is what it looked like on November 14th.


Not one to easily give up, by February of 2008, I had moved it to a sunnier spot on the south side of the mobile home.



By the end of March, I gave up on the lemon tree. All I had left was an empty pot, with a funny little frog on a stick poking out of it.



Want to see my pretty ficus (Indian Laurel) tree?


Pretty ficus, October 2007


Not so pretty ficus, October 2009.


Back to our trip to Blythe for the Meyer lemon tree...no, we weren't successful in finding what we wanted. I guess we are looking for a dwarf Meyer lemon. The ones we found were 5-6 feet tall, and we want one that can live in a pot and travel back and forth, from AZ to WA, each year. No way could we transport a 6-foot tall tree! And you know what? With our luck at growing trees down here, maybe it's just as well we didn't find one.


14 comments:

  1. Sounds like a lemon tree is not in the cards for you! But heck, you grow tomatoes like nobody else can, so paint em yellow and pretend!
    :D

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  2. Maybe; just maybe, you should give Lemon Tree's a wide berth !!!!

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  3. *Sob* I needed popcorn and a tissue to get through that one. It's the perfect soap opera. I can see you coming home, falling to your knees, shaking your fists in the air and yelling, "Noooooo!"

    Why not put the lemon tree in Washington?

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  4. Looks like the tree Gods are not with you. I hope they have a little mercy, though. Walking outside and picking your own home-grown lemons would be soooo satisfying.

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  5. You will love the Meyer lemon tree....it's the ONLY lemon to have! It should be able to travel well, too! I can't get used to looking at your desert garden, lol! When I finally get used to it, you will be back in WA!

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  6. Poor trees! I LOVE the smell of blossoming citrus trees!

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  7. Oh dear. Maybe your trees are just suicidal? You might not want to live either if you had such prickly company all the time.

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  8. Sue, funny girl! You know, I did wire some plastic lemons onto the dead stick for a while. It didn't make me feel a bit better, but it made the neighbors laugh.

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    Gary Jen and ruby, I'm stubborn. Or dumb.

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    Ribbit, that's why we're looking for a dwarf lemon we can grow in a pot. It would have to be transported back and forth by car (or pickup), as it can't survive Washington winters, and won't survive AZ summers. At least not for me...my neighbor has a nice little lemon tree, but she lives here year round to care for it. Oh, I did buy popcorn yesterday...gotta try out the new popper!

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    Cheryl, the tree gods are angry because we cut down the two ugly mesquites that were here. Wouldn't have, had I known we couldn't grow a replacement :-(

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    Erin, yes...IF I can find a small one. My first meeting with a lemon tree happened to be with a Meyer. I loved that tree!

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    Shawn Ann, nothing smells sweeter..except maybe the Idaho state flower, the Syringa (Mock Orange). I could grow one of those in WA.

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    Daphne, I live just fine with Mr. H! ;-)

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  9. True Dwarf Meyers are very nice. Why not get one, put it in a big pot, and take it with you? That way you both could be happy. They really want more water than you'd think, even here, land o'lemons.

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  10. Uh, Stefaneener....did you read my final paragraph? ;-)

    ...no, we weren't successful in finding what we wanted. I guess we are looking for a dwarf Meyer lemon. The ones we found were 5-6 feet tall, and we want one that can live in a pot and travel back and forth, from AZ to WA, each year. No way could we transport a 6-foot tall tree!

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  11. Gran...I'm sorry, I did giggle a bit when I read this...not at your expense of course. Maybe you should consider purchasing one online. www.fourwindsgrowers.com. They sell only dwarf trees and they had a hand in propagating the first improved meyer lemon tree.

    Also, when you purchase your tree, you might want buy some slow release citrus fertilizer...believe me, it does wonder.

    Finally, have you thought that your water guy might have been over-watering it? I only water my tree about once every 3 days during the summer and once every 5 days during the winter.

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  12. Thomas, I'm sure my guy didn't water it at all! He'd actually removed the bubbler at the palm, which diverted all the water to that tree, and none went up a level to the lemon tree. Now, the ficus is a different story. I had that one set exactly as I wanted, but the neighbor was leaving AZ for a couple of months and decided it would need more water in the 120F temperatures. He opened up the bubbler so that it absolutely poured out, rather than the very low flow I'd set it at. It was getting watered three times a week, and with the extra flow of water, it was getting completely drowned. He said it was alive and nice and green when he left, but I found it dead two months later.

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  13. Hysterical post. What a challenge, gardening in the desert when you can't be there to oversee your plant babies. Hope your traveling Meyer does better for you. I'm looking forward to my first harvest in a few weeks from my dwarf Meyer lemon here in southern California.

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  14. Oh, Lou....I hope so too! That is, if we ever find one to pot up and travel with us. I was hoping to find one locally, but I think I'll have to follow Thomas' advise and send for one.

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