Garden Inventory: Lemon

Garden Inventory is a series where I begin an inventory of all the plants and trees in my garden. Along with some of my own pictures, I will link to various sources of information about each plant and tree so we can learn a little more together.

I would also like to highlight your special plants and tress. Pass along your favorite plants in the comments and I will use them for future Garden Inventory posts. — Douglas


Garden Inventory: Lemon

“The lemon (Citrus × limon) is a small evergreen tree native to Asia, and the tree’s ellipsoidal yellow fruit. The fruit is used for culinary and non-culinary purposes throughout the world, primarily for its juice, though the pulp and rind (zest) are also used in cooking and baking. The juice of the lemon is about 5% to 6% citric acid, which gives lemons a sour taste. The distinctive sour taste of lemon juice makes it a key ingredient in drinks and foods such as lemonade. — Wikipedia.org

This sad, little, lemon tree has been in the garden since our ownership began 16 years ago. It was planted in a bad location and heavily shaded and crowded by other trees. We recently removed one of the main trees shading this spot, so I am interested in seeing if the tree gets a little more robust. I am seeing many more flowers than previously, as you can see in some of the pictures below.

Here in Southern California, citrus trees are in almost every yard, but it is relatively few people who use even a portion of the fruit they produce. Lemons are probably the worst offender tree, as recipes use so little lemon juice of lemon rind that it can be difficult to put all your fruit to use. For me, I use about 15 lemons in my yearly batch of limoncello (see video on making your own limoncello here) and a few pitchers of lemonade, but a heavily producing tree, even a dwarf one, which I believe this is, can produce a grocery bag full of lemons very quickly.

 Garden Inventory: Lemon - 07

Garden Inventory: Lemon - 13Garden Inventory: Lemon - 12Garden Inventory: Lemon - 11Garden Inventory: Lemon - 10Garden Inventory: Lemon - 09Garden Inventory: Lemon - 08

Garden Inventory: Lemon - 06Garden Inventory: Lemon - 04Garden Inventory: Lemon - 03Garden Inventory: Lemon - 02Garden Inventory: Lemon - 01

Photos of Lemon tree with closeups of leaves, flowers,  growing habit, trunk and bark

More information on Lemon:

Previously on Garden Inventory:

Spring is coming! Really, I Promise!

 Strawberries in my containers

SPRING IS COMING!

Living here in Southern California at this time of year, I like to offer hope to those of you living in colder climes — Spring is coming!!!

I have eaten strawberries from my container garden already and have potatoes and onions rising from the soil. It will soon be the same in your own garden, I am sure. I don’t say this to make you envious, but rather to offer you a bit of home if your garden is still covered in snow and the ground frozen as hard as rock.

I grew up in a small town in northern Ohio, so despite my 26 years here in Los Angeles, I still remember the bone-chilling cold, the snow drifts, the dirty, ice hard snow frozen along the streets. I also remember, though, the sheer joy when Spring arrived. It would come in fits and starts — often snowing on the first day of Spring, but soon the leaves would begin to appear on the 100-year-old maples lining West Main Street, the grass would begin to green and grow and the apple trees in the disused orchard behind our house would burst into bloom.

In a farming community, Spring was a big deal, of course. Equipment was being repaired all Winter long in concrete and steel workshop barns and would soon be back in the fields. Some farmers, ever eager to get started, would find themselves mired in the wet soil when they tried to get into the fields too soon. Mud was simply part of the season, though, and we all learned again to leave our shoes outside the door whenever we entered into the house.

If you are like most gardeners, you are planning and preparing your garden for 2013. I would love to hear what is happening — or about to happen — in your garden. You can share your garden with myself — and other AGN readers — on most of the social networks. A Gardener’s Notebook is on Facebook, Google+, Twitter and more. You’ll find links to all of these in the sidebar to your right.

Until next time…Keep Digging!

Dewsig
 
Subscribers to the Gardener’s Notebook Mailing List received early access to this post and other special notices.