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dancinglemons

Size of Meyer Lemons ??

dancinglemons
11 years ago

Hello again,

I've got 2 Meyer Lemon trees and both bear fruit. However one of my Meyer trees has never gotten taller than 2 feet tall and it bears HUGE lemons and lots of them. These huge Myer lemons are about the size of a large navel orange. I know they are Meyer because of the taste. The shape of these huge Meyer is like a Tangelo with the little 'temple' on the stem end. I can post a photo if that will help. The taller Meyer is about 4 feet tall and bears a modest amount of smaller lemons about the size of apricots.

Anyone here have Meyer that bear very large lemons?? I've only seen small Meyer in the grocer and they are smooth and yellow/orange in color -- my huge Meyer are yellow when mature. The only local person I know who is a citrus grower (in containers) says he has never seen a Meyer like this one. He took some cuttings to grow out because he likes the large lemons. I got the plant from Monrovia nursery several years ago. (5? 6? yrs) BTW this particular Meyer also blooms and holds fruit even when majority of the leaves drop. Could this be a different strain of Meyer?? I know the taller Meyer is on some sort of rootstock because the branches that attempt to grow out of the lower trunk each summer have a "3 leaf" pattern -- which is completely different that the fruit bearing portion of the tree.

I should mention that I grow exclusively in container and put my trees in homemade hoop house over winter.

Thanks,
DL

Comments (46)

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

    Well, I suspect you've already hit on the answer - different rootstocks. There are not different Meyer lemon cultivars - all are the Improved Meyer lemon and are basically clones of the original tree. Rootstocks can affect size of tree, productivity, vigor, fruit set and flavor. I would contact Monrovia and ask what rootstock they used for their Meyer lemons 5 to 6 years ago. Photos of both trees would be helpful. Please post close up photos of the leaves and the fruits, and it you can cut a fruit of each in half, too, that would be helpful.

    Patty S.

  • dancinglemons
    Original Author
    11 years ago

    Thanks again Patty S. I will get those photos and post them in few days when we get a warm up.

    DL

  • jakkom
    11 years ago

    Meyers can be surprisingly variable in size, shape, and even color. I have three of them, and one plant occasionally bears massive oval lemons right next to smaller round ones. I picked my first winter 2012 harvest a week ago, and most of them were still partially green in color although fully ripe.

    Make sure you feed them properly. They get really hungry during harvest season!

  • johnmerr
    11 years ago

    The two trees could possibly be on different rootstocks, which can affect the size of the fruit; or they may just have come from different parent stock. Most nurseries use budwood from various trees/sources. My budwood grove and all the trees we sell or plant are genetically identical; there may be some potential downside, but it works for me.

    John

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

    jkom is correct, the fruit will vary on the tree. My Meyer lemon has round lemons with no nipples, and then the more traditional elongated "lemon" shape with a nipple all on the same tree, this is a trait of the Meyer. But, for two trees with very drastic differences in not only the fruit size and appearance, but also the size of the tree, I suspect you have Meyers on different rootstocks. The small one may be on some sort of dwarfing rootstock, and your other one may be on own roots.

    Patty S.

  • jimspencer8
    8 years ago

    I have found, growing apparently wild near Warrenton, VA, a bushy tree with small (1.25" diameter) yellow citrus fruit, with a sharp taste and lots of pips. The skin is thin and smooth, with a light peachy "fuzz". It doesn't seem to match any of the lemon or lime descriptions I have found. Any ideas?

  • jimspencer8
    8 years ago

    I should mention that the bush is spectacularly thorny.

  • BarbJP 15-16/9B CA Bay Area
    8 years ago

    Interesting. Sounds like citrus pontiferos which is a cold hardy type used for root stock. Could be seed grown from a bird or other critter or an abandoned tree that died back to the root stock. Could this area have ever been part of a yard, maybe an old abandoned farm?

  • jimspencer8
    8 years ago

    It's on farmland, but on the bank of a steep-sided creek. I can't imagine it being part of a yard - it's right on the rough edge of a 30 ac lot, nearly half a mile from the house. The idea of a bird or critter "sowing" the seed seems very likely. I make marmalade, and usually add a lemon to the Seville oranges. I thought I might try a few of these.

  • jimspencer8
    8 years ago

    I Googled citrus pontiferos, and Poncirus trifoliata came up as the first item. Photos look just right, so maybe that's it. Thanks for the link!

  • BarbJP 15-16/9B CA Bay Area
    8 years ago

    Yeah they're similar if not the same thing. You're wecome. :)



  • Dave in NoVA • N. Virginia • zone 7A
    8 years ago

    It's Poncirus trifoliata. It is the only citrus relative that could possibly be hardy here.

  • jimspencer8
    8 years ago

    Thank you!

  • poncirusguy6b452xx
    8 years ago

    old Meyer post with a trifoliata switch. My lemon

    almost as big as an under inflated football

  • parker25mv
    8 years ago

    Ironically, when a fruit tree is stunted, in certain cases, more of the tree's energy can go to producing fruit, rather than growth. This is the reason cherry trees almost always have grafted rootstock, by the way. I'm not sure what is causing your smaller Meyer tree to be stunted, maybe the bigger one is getting more nitrogen in the soil?

  • Estevan Guzman
    8 years ago

    The biggest one I get is about 21 inches around, they do have a 1 inch thick skin, but they are very meaty and taste very good. The inside the middle is hollow where all the seeds come together, strange! I will start saving the seeds. It is the first year it has yield fruit. Its about 15 to 18' tall. Could I sell the seeds?.............Estevan

  • poncirusguy6b452xx
    8 years ago

    Estevan Guzman Mine turned out to be the rootstock Cuban Shaddock. They look just like yours including the leaves. I picked mine much to soon. Was yours sweet, sour, or a balanced mix.

  • Phil McCraken
    8 years ago

    We planted our tree 4 years ago. We get 100's of lemons that range is size from 8 oz small to 15 oz. We see recipes for 3 to 4 meyers lemon to get a cup of fruit. 3 or 4 of ours would yield 2 or 3 cups. Everyone we give lemons to are amazed at the size. Is this normal? I feel better after seeing Mr Guzman's melon size lemons.

  • poncirusguy6b452xx
    8 years ago

    Mr Guzman's melon size lemons Are Cuban Shaddocks not Meyer lemons. I have learned that the C.S. fruit is better than store bought lemons and are closer to the taste of a Meyer lemon. Your tree serves you well. Could you post a picture of your tree/s

  • Phil McCraken
    8 years ago

    Here is my Meyer tree

  • BarbJP 15-16/9B CA Bay Area
    8 years ago

    Where?

  • Phil McCraken
    8 years ago

    Tallahasse FL

  • poncirusguy6b452xx
    8 years ago

    Phil Where is the

    picture of your tree. It appears to have not posted.

  • Estevan Guzman
    8 years ago

    Did someone need me to post a picture of my tree? Cuban Shaddocks! I will look into that, Thank you for the info!


  • poncirusguy6b452xx
    8 years ago

    I was wanting to see what a 4 year old in ground Meyer lemon tree looks like


  • BarbJP 15-16/9B CA Bay Area
    8 years ago

    Not the best angle, but here's a Meyer in the ground at least 40 years. The fence is about 5' tall. Does that help?

  • hobbyartisan (Saskatoon, SK Canada, 2b)
    8 years ago

    Barb and Nick, those make me sick with envy! I have a couple of meyers but they are way less mature than yours... I can't wait for proper production- for containers anyway.

  • hobbyartisan (Saskatoon, SK Canada, 2b)
    8 years ago

    Barb what do you do with them all???

  • BarbJP 15-16/9B CA Bay Area
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    I don't live here anymore, it's now our rental house, and we live elsewhere. So I don't know what the tenants do with them.

    When I lived there I made tons of lemonade, lemon curd, lemon meringue pie, lemon pound cake, etc. And gave away as many as they would take to friends and family.

    But even so there were so many that it couldn't be helped that some of them just ended up falling and rotting under the tree. A mature Meyer lemon tree is a lemon factory!

    I think that's partly what got me so into citrus. Our current place has two mature navel orange trees but no lemon trees. So I got a Meyer, and then I like mandarins a lot, so got a mandarin, then someone gave me a Yuzu lime, and so on, and the rest is history. We have a bad gopher problem here, so they've been in pots for the last 3 years or so until I could save up the money to do something with them.

    This week we planted 14 of them in an old orchard area. Had irrigation put in too. I'll start a new thread with pics of the project.

  • Laura LaRosa (7b)
    8 years ago

    My Meyer lemons are like Nick's. My tree is about 5 ft (in the pot) and it produced nearly 3 dozen huge lemons..the size of my palm. They look nothing like ones I bought at the store recently...and mine were MUCH juicier, although they had thicker skins.

  • Phil McCraken
    8 years ago

    It a little hard to see but it's next to the wall. We move in 5 years ago and planted it the next spring.

  • hobbyartisan (Saskatoon, SK Canada, 2b)
    8 years ago

    Phil your photo has not posted... if it had you would see it here.

  • hobbyartisan (Saskatoon, SK Canada, 2b)
    8 years ago

    Barb I love to cook so to have so may at my disposal would be amazing! Lemon curd is my absolute fave too- I have ducks so their eggs are just Perfect!

    Laura that is encouraging that so many can grow on a container tree! Can't wait! My local garden centre has some big more mature meyers, maybe I deserve a treat this week lol!

  • Nick (9b) Modesto Area
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    I bought my Meyer lemon tree in July of 2014 and it was only a foot tall. Now its about 3 feet. Last fall I had over 40 lemons on the tree. Take a look at the thread I started called my Citrus in containers and see my last post of the tree when I bought it and what it looks like now in its new container. It looked like a charlie brown tree when I took it home lol. Here is the link.

    http://forums.gardenweb.com/discussions/3718197/my-citrus-in-containers?n=7

  • hobbyartisan (Saskatoon, SK Canada, 2b)
    8 years ago

    Amazing Nick! Yes I saw that old thread, the trunks are so thick, my trees are like pencils compared to yours. Your climate is a bit more hospitable than mine, but still your progress is encouraging, thanks! In a couple of years I should get a decent amount then.

  • Laura LaRosa (7b)
    8 years ago

    Nick, those look great!!! Those look like the Meyers I get. Hobby, I love to cook also and am eagerly anticipating my new crop of lemons and Key limes. As of now, my biggest tree (Meyer) has just over 30 lemons...they range in size, but they are a decent size. However, it is loaded with buds! As soon as I get it outside it will burst. Can't wait!!! My Key lime that was soooo pathetic has 30+ Limes and is loaded with buds. It IS possible to get lots of fruit from container trees. Actually, the way I got into citrus was through a friend of my daughters who gave us a bunch of lemons to trade for honey. Her tree produced close to 50 lemons!!!

  • Nick (9b) Modesto Area
    8 years ago

    My key lime had over a 100 limes on it last year and it is in a container. Its about a 5 foot tree.

  • Laura LaRosa (7b)
    8 years ago

    WOW Nick! That is incredible! Mine is pretty small still and recovering. How wide is your Key lime? I've heard they get bushy. Mine is bush-like, though only less than a foot tall. I think it is wider than it is tall...

  • Nick (9b) Modesto Area
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    The Tree is about 5 feet tall.

  • Laura LaRosa (7b)
    8 years ago

    Nick, it is a great-looking tree! I have one that is tree-like and another that is more of a bush. It will be interesting to watch them develop. They are both pretty young. I would be thrilled with so many limes....just think of all the Key lime pie....;-)

  • poncirusguy6b452xx
    8 years ago

    very nice looking tree and container. I don't know what anyone can do with that many limes but if that were a kumquat tree and mine I would be ecstatic.

  • hobbyartisan (Saskatoon, SK Canada, 2b)
    8 years ago

    My Key lime is also 5 feet tall and looks a lot like Nick's but it has only flowered a few times and no fruit yet. But this is encouraging, I could be close to fruit!!!

  • Laura LaRosa (7b)
    8 years ago

    I can't wait for mine to recover and bloom. When it does, I'll post pics!

  • Nick (9b) Modesto Area
    8 years ago

    I'm sure my weather in the Central Valley has everything to do with the production on my small dwarf trees. I'm having the same good luck with my small avocado trees as well. I'll keep my fingers crossed this season. :)

  • Ronald Johnson
    3 years ago

    Thanks for the information, our first year,I have 2 trees,one at 6' and one at 2',we have kept them indoors throughout the extremely cold weather, the tallet plant bloomed first a few weeks ago, smaller tree just did open a few blossoms today, we are looking forward to whatever fruit we get, maybe I will sell lemonade in my old age,almost there LOL.