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mr_z1

Dwarf Lemon Meyer Rootstock at HomeDepot

mr_z1
9 years ago

Just an FYI in case you guys were wondering like I was, I couldn't find the graft line for my dwarf lemon meyer improved that I bought at HomeDepot a couple months ago and wanted to know if it was truly grafted or just a cutting. I emailed La Verne Nursery (HomeDepot's citrus + other fruit trees supplier) and received the following:


Thanks for your inquiry. It is grafted; the reason you cannot see the graft union is because we do a great job in our grafting!! Thanks again for purchasing our products, we appreciate it. The rootstock is C35.
Richard Wilson - CEO
La Verne Nursery Inc.


To my surprise, I got a reply back from their CEO and found out that it is graft and it looks like they are using C35 (semi-dwarf) now instead of flying dragon. Hope this helps.

This post was edited by Mr.Z on Tue, Aug 26, 14 at 3:40

Comments (11)

  • hoosierquilt USDA 10A Sunset 23 Vista CA
    9 years ago

    I don't think La Verne used 'Flying Dragon' much at all. Most west coast growers do not. C35 is one of the more commonly used semi-dwarfing rootstocks now, taking favor over Troyer/Carizzo these days. La Verne is a great nursery and produce very nice trees.

    Patty S.

  • maggyby
    9 years ago

    Patty, I just wanted to ask you if Carizzo is a good root stock.? I bought a Satsuma and Moro orange that are both grafted on it. Just curious if it is semi dwarf ? Thanks . Maggy

  • hoosierquilt USDA 10A Sunset 23 Vista CA
    9 years ago

    Perfectly fine, Maggy. Has been used for decades here in S. California. Since you're in zone 6b, I'm assuming your citrus tree will be in a container, so rootstock is really not as much a concern, as you're in a controlled environment. Yes, it is semi-dwarfing.

    Patty S.

  • maggyby
    9 years ago

    Thank you Patty. Yes my citrus are in containers. Appreciate your response. Maggy

  • johnmerr
    9 years ago

    Patty,

    I doubt many commercial growers would consider Carrizo as semi-dwarfing. In fact it does produce a mature tree a bit smaller than say sour orange or macrophylla... but dwarfing or even semi-dwarfing is not something any of my knowledgeable growers would use to describe Carrizo.

  • mr_z1
    Original Author
    9 years ago

    I figured dwarf = flying dragon and semi-dwarf = c32/35 for california. I know Lowes labels their citrus as semi-dwarf and Homedepot labels them as dwarf so I was pretty sure they used a different rootstock. I was wrong.

  • hoosierquilt USDA 10A Sunset 23 Vista CA
    9 years ago

    Our commercial growers here in California do, indeed, consider Troyer/Carrizo as semi-dwarfing, John. It still produces a sizable tree, but not the same as Macroyphylla, Volk, Swingle, or sour orange (which of course is not used any longer, but that was the standard used to measure Troyer/Carrizo against). And yes, Mr. Z, that would be a good description, but as I've said, 'Flying Dragon' just isn't used here in S. California for a multitude of reasons. You'll see Four Winds Growers use Cuban Shaddock, which could probably be termed more of a dwarfing rootstock that C32/C35.

    Patty S.

  • uncle molewacker z9b Danville CA (E.SF Bay)
    9 years ago

    Interesting. Willits & Newcomb consider Carrizo a "standard" rootstock and claim largest size. They also suggested to me that it likes a pH of ~ 6.5 - a bit acidic. I have planted a dozen varieties on Carrizo in 2012 and have found it to be a bit finicky when first planted, but terrific once it gets traction. I also found Carrizo to be one of the better freeze tolerant rootstocks.
    -George

  • hoosierquilt USDA 10A Sunset 23 Vista CA
    9 years ago

    And, W&N will prune their Carrizo to "standard" lollipop shapes, which is also part of the "standard" definition. Other growers will market Carrizo as "semi-dwarfing" and not prune.

    If you read the last page of the "California Citrus Rootstocks" booklet produced by UC Riverside, you will see they categorize both Troyer and Carrizo as inferring a "medium" tree size. Swingle is small, C35 is small, C32 large, Volk as med/large (it can get VERY large here on my property) and Macro as medium (but betting that's not the case for John, who has ideal growing conditions for Macrophylla rootstock - his trees are big and get big, very fast).

    I don't think I would consider 6.5 acidic, but within the neutral range (6.5 to 7.5). Carrizo and Troyer are essentially indistinguishable, so what I say for Carrizo would apply to Troyer. You'll see most growers are starting to favor C35 now, due to size constraints, more precocious,produce fruit faster, as well as they are more tolerant to phytophthora. C32 is a full sized, standard rootstock. Spent some time talking to the curators of the Riverside Citrus Park, and they shared that most commercial growers are switching over to trees on C35. I agree - Carrizo has not fared as well in my yard as the trees on C35, due to my heavy phytophthora issues. But, if I can keep the tree alive, it will eventually mature enough to overcome any phytophthora issues, which I found rather interesting.

    Patty S.

    This post was edited by hoosierquilt on Tue, Aug 26, 14 at 14:28

  • uncle molewacker z9b Danville CA (E.SF Bay)
    9 years ago

    Thank you for the input Patty! Yes, agree and it will be interesting to see how big the Carrizo gets vs. the C35 here in Danville. If C35 gets larger, some day the yard will look planted back-asswards - ha!

    W&N does list the C-35 as SD. The trees are pruned to the same size as the "Standard" so there is a double "standard" if you will in this industry.

    Interestingly, i bought a Australian Finger Lime from Four Winds last year - on Volk; and labeled as "True Dwarf". Its comical!

    Just as FYI, the image below is a copy from W&N's color chart PDF.

  • johnmerr
    9 years ago

    I tend to believe my own experiences. A few years ago I planted 500 Meyers on Carrizo; I did not have a good experience with that rootstock; but as far as size the Carrizo Meyers were indistinguishable from my Macrophylla Meyers. Of course that is my soils and my climate; it could be different under different conditions.

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