Gardening in PR Q & A
I'll also need some large clay or outdoor planters.
Anyone with experience growing in PR please add your info - thanks
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http://www.lifetransplanet.com/
I'm looking to develop some type of landscape design that will work with the current structures.
As far as fruit trees, anything goes except lemons. The easiest to grow are papayas and passion fruit (vine) Govardhan Gardens on the west coast has a large variety of fruit trees and plants for sale, he will ship some plants & seeds to you directly if needed. There are a couple of other people in that area that are serious horticulturists, let me know if you will be over there and I'll look up the info. There are plenty of places on the east coast as well.
The best place I have found for clay pots is home depot. Seems a lot of nurseries buy from them and then add on their overhead. Right around mid-late spring is the best time to buy containers there or at Costco. Last time Costco had a great deal on some huge beautiful planters for only $20 a piece. They were fiberglass (faux ceramic finish) and have held up well so far. Hopefully whatever property you are on has good soil and isn't comprised mostly of clay. Otherwise, I would suggest making your own compost right off the bat. There are a few compost sellers here but they aren't true composts. I have found a lot of debris, clay and sand in the composts I have bought and they were definitely not cheap.
Karenqc wrote:As far as fruit trees, anything goes except lemons.
What is the issue with Lemons????
I would think lemons, lime, oranges, etc would grow fine. I seem to remember lemons being grown from my childhood, but that was a LOOOG time ago.
Here is an article from 2014. My mil has a lime tree in the back of her house that looks pretty bad but we still juice the limes that are salvageable. I've only seen two lemon trees since I've been here and they were on death's door. I do however wonder where all those bags of oranges come from. I really hate oranges so I never ventured to ask but lemons I miss having in abundance.
http://fruitsandnuts.ucdavis.edu/datastore/
Karenqc wrote:Rey,
Here is an article from 2014. My mil has a lime tree in the back of her house that looks pretty bad but we still juice the limes that are salvageable. I've only seen two lemon trees since I've been here and they were on death's door. I do however wonder where all those bags of oranges come from. I really hate oranges so I never ventured to ask but lemons I miss having in abundance.
Thanks, so the issue is an infectation that is killing the trees. I will look into it more when I move, i want orages, lemos, and limes even if i have to spoon feed them.
I have seen people grow tomatoes (non-determinate type) that get huge, last multi years an produce fruit year round on a trellised support.
What about garden pests? Do we need to watch for any type of bugs or garden pests in PR? Will the iguana's eat my lettus?
Just an idea
Rey
They basically eat most insects.
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