Fruit tree plants
Tropical Fruit Trees for Sale
Up to 60% off
Meyer Lemon Tree
Sunlight: Partial to Full-Sun (Indoors near a bright window is fine)
Growth Rate: Moderate
Harvest Time: October-March
Starting at $15.95
Ice Cream Banana Tree
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: Varies
Starting at $79. 95
Cold Hardy Avocado Tree
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: September-November
Starting at $69.95
Glenn Mango Tree
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: June-July
Starting at $119. 95
Star Ruby Grapefruit Tree
Sunlight: Full Sun
Growth Rate: Moderate
Harvest Time: October-June
Starting at $99.95
Dwarf Cavendish Banana Tree
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: January
Starting at $79. 95
Up to 10% off
Anna Hardy Kiwi
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: August - September
Starting at $89.95
Dragon Fruit Cactus
Sunlight: Full Sun
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: May - July
Starting at $29. 95
Up to 16% off
Key Lime Tree
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Moderate
Harvest Time: August and December
Starting at $99.95
Guava Tree 'Ruby Supreme'
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Moderate
Harvest Time: June - August
Starting at $139. 95
Sugar Apple Tree (Sweetsop Tree)
Sunlight: Full Sun
Growth Rate: Moderate
Starting at $119.95
Emperor Lychee Tree
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Slow
Harvest Time: April-May
Starting at $129. 95
Nancy Garrison Passion Fruit Vine
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Fast
Starting at $89.95
Dragon Fruit Cactus - USDA Organic
Sunlight: Full Sun
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: May - July
Starting at $39. 95
Passion Fruit Vine (Flower)
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Fast
Starting at $39.95
American Beauty Dragon Fruit
Sunlight: Full Sun
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: May - July
Starting at $49. 95
Up to 25% off
Limequat Citrus Tree
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Moderate
Harvest Time: November-March
Starting at $59.95
Up to 33% off
Ruby Red Grapefruit Tree
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Moderate
Harvest Time: October
Starting at $39. 95
Sugarloaf Pineapple Plant
Sunlight: Full Sun
Growth Rate: Moderate
Harvest Time: various
Starting at $49.95
Grand Nain 'Naine' Banana Tree
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: January
Starting at $69. 95
The taste of the tropics in your backyard.
Exotic, island-inspired flavors, unique textures, and second-to-none growth, right from home. Our Tropical Fruit Trees can be planted in your garden, backyard, or in a container for your patio or indoor spaces without effort.
What are Tropical Fruits?
Tropical Fruits are a diverse group indigenous to tropical locales and include Mangoes, Pineapples and even some types of Apples. We have a large variety of Tropical Fruit Trees that are well-suited to your location; so, despite their origins, they’ll still thrive in a number of environments.
How to Grow Tropical Fruits
Though specific planting directions depend on the variety you choose, all Tropical Fruit Trees must be grown in the proper growing zones (and if your outdoor growing zone doesn’t suffice for these unique fruits, plant them in a container and grow them indoors). Above all, keep sunlight and watering needs in mind.
From there, planting your one-of-a-kind trees is simple. Find an area with well-drained soil or select a container large enough to accommodate the tree’s root ball, place your tree and backfill soil. Finally, water the soil to settle your tree’s roots and mulch to conserve moisture.
When to Plant Tropical Fruit Trees
Generally, you should plant your Tropical Fruit Trees in early spring. However, you can plant your Tropical Fruit Trees in pots to stay on the porch or move indoors nearly any time of year.
How to Pollinate Tropical Fruits
Many of our Tropical Fruit Trees are self-fertile, but you’ll almost always have bigger harvests by planting more than one tree nearby. And for those that need a cross-pollinator, we’ve recommended the best pollination partners on each product page.
Here’s how pollination usually works: Bees help spread the pollen of one tree from bloom to bloom, helping fruit emerge, or bees carry the pollen from one tree to another tree, ensuring both varieties fruit.
With indoor trees, hand pollination is sometimes necessary. However, the process is easy: Simply transfer pollen from one bloom to the next on your tree by using a clean, dry paintbrush and swirling pollen on each bloom’s center.
When to Prune and Harvest Tropical Fruit Trees
Wait until the dormant fall and winter seasons to prune your Tropical Trees. At this point, remove diseased, dead or broken branches, suckers and any competing branches on your Tropical Fruits. You should also ensure you’re making your cuts with a clean, sterilized pair of shears.
As far as harvesting goes, different varieties will ripen in different seasons: Some as early as the first year in the summer, and some after a few years and as late as the fall season.
Kiwi Plants for Sale | FastGrowingTrees.com
Up to 10% off
Anna Hardy Kiwi
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: August - September
Starting at $89. 95
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Fuzzy Kiwi
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: August
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Fuzzy Kiwi - USDA Organic
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: August
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Meader Hardy Kiwi
Sunlight: Full-Partial
Growth Rate: Fast
Harvest Time: August
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Exotic flavors from your own backyard.Imagine the promise of exotic growth in your own homescape. With our Kiwi Plants, it's possible (and easy). We've planted, grown and shipped our Kiwi Plants with the absolute best care, so you get a well-rooted, healthy fruit plant delivered directly to your door.
Kiwi Plants: How to GrowThough specific planting directions depend on the variety of Kiwi Plant you choose, all must be grown in the proper growing zones (or indoors). The most important factors are sunlight and watering needs. Most Kiwi Plants prefer well-drained soil and full sun, or 6 to 8 hours of sunlight per day, but specific instructions will vary.
From there, planting your Kiwi Plants is simple. Find an area with well-drained soil or select a container large enough to accommodate the root ball, place your plant and backfill the soil. Finally, water the surrounding soil and mulch to conserve moisture.
How to Care for Kiwi PlantsGenerally, you should plant your Kiwi Plants in early spring. However, you can plant in a container to stay on the porch or move indoors nearly any time of year.
Also, you'll want to water your Kiwi Plants regularly - once or twice weekly. If you're not sure when to water, simply check the soil about 2 or 3 inches down. If the soil is dry here, it's time to water!
As far as harvesting goes, different varieties will ripen in different seasons.
How to Tell Male and Female Kiwi Plants Apart
We get it: It can be daunting to buy fruits without a green thumb, or when you're not sure how to plant. However, we've made it easy, especially with our pollination packs. You won't have to figure out how to get your Kiwi Plants to fruit since we've bundled our varieties, the Anna Kiwi and Meader Kiwi.
names, photos, species and cultivation
A well-maintained orchard is the pride of any gardener. Everyone grows trees in his garden according to his own taste and the climate of the area. However, thanks to the achievements of breeders, today it has become possible to grow fruit crops in the north, which have always been considered southern, so the border between heat-loving and frost-resistant crops has become less clear. Moreover, from seedlings of new varieties, the harvest can be obtained not in five to seven years, as before, but already in the second or third year.
What fruit trees usually grow in our gardens? Apple trees, pears, apricots, cherries, plums and cherries. In southern climates, peach, mulberry, pomegranate and fig can be grown. Many of these crops are not only tasty, but also have medicinal properties. Exotic fruit trees - date, coffee tree, kumquat, avocado, feijoa, lemon, cocoa - can be grown from seeds in a greenhouse or on a windowsill.
Trees consist of a root system, trunk, central conductor and lateral (skeletal, semi-skeletal, overgrowing) branches. Two types of buds are formed on the branches: growth, or vegetative, and flower, or generative. Generative buds are larger than growth buds and have a more rounded shape. From them, flowers develop first, and then fruits. The fruits of trees are fruits, berries and nuts.
Friends, today I will tell you how to do autumn budding, or grafting with a bud, on sweet cherries.
Many gardeners make such a miscalculation: they buy a seedling in a garden pavilion or in the market, and only then they begin to figure out where to attach it to the plot ...
Today we will talk about why apple trees do not bear fruit or bear fruit very poorly. There are several reasons for this phenomenon.
Common apricot (lat. Prunus armeniaca) is a species of fruit tree of the Plum genus of the Rosaceae family. Scientists still do not know exactly where the apricot came from. Some believe that from the Tien Shan region in China, others are sure that Armenia is the birthplace of the plant. In any case, the apricot came to Europe from Armenia: there is a version that Alexander the Great brought it to Greece, and from there the tree came to Italy, but there is no documentary evidence for this.
Azimina (lat. Asimina), or pow-pow, is a genus of flowering plants of the Annona family, which includes 8 species, distributed, for the most part, in the nature of the United States. Azimina is also called a banana tree or American papaya (pow-pow), since the fruits of all three plants have some similarities with each other. For the sake of these edible fruits, a three-lobed pawpaw, or triloba pawpaw (Asimina triloba), introduced into cultivation in 1736, is grown in gardens. It is grown in regions with a warm climate, for example, in Italy, France, Japan and Spain.
Common quince, or quince oblong (lat. Cydonia), is a monotypic genus of woody plants of the Rosaceae family, common in nature in Central Asia, the Transcaucasus and the Caucasus, as well as in temperate regions of Asia, in Central and Southern Europe, where it grows on the edges, clearings and clearings, along the banks of rivers and streams, in the lower belt of mountains. Quince prefers loose, moist and fertile sandy, heavy loamy, red earth and black earth soils.
Cherry plum (lat. Prunus cerasifera), or splayed plum, or cherry plum - a species of the genus Plum of the Rosaceae family, a woody fruit plant, which is one of the original forms of domestic plum. The word cherry plum comes from the Azerbaijani language and means "small plum". The plant itself comes from Western Asia and Transcaucasia, in the wild cherry plum can also be found in the south of Ukraine, in Moldova, in the Tien Shan, the Balkans, in Iran and in the North Caucasus. In culture, it is cultivated in Russia, Ukraine, Western Europe and Asia.
The wide variety of fruits and berries offered for growing in cultivation encourages gardeners to experiment daringly. But often even those who do not have summer cottages dare to grow plants from the seeds of eaten fruits or berries. For example, in many gardens or on balconies, arbutus grows, which is otherwise called strawberry tree or strawberry.
Aronia, or chokeberry (lat. Aronia melanocarpa) is a fruit shrub or tree belonging to the species Aronia of the Rosaceae family. The name of the plant in Greek means help, benefit. Aronia rowan originates from eastern North America, where it grows along the banks of lakes and rivers. In total, up to 20 species of chokeberry can be found in North America. In Europe, chokeberry was grown as an ornamental plant, but in the 19th century Michurin discovered that it was unpretentious and suitable for selection, and as a result, the aronia berry grows literally everywhere today.
Plant barberry (lat. Berberis) belongs to a numerous genus of shrubs and trees of the Barberry family. The genus name comes from the Arabic "beiberi", meaning "shell-shaped". Barberries are distributed mainly in the mountainous areas of the Northern Hemisphere and there are about 170 species, some of which are introduced into cultivation. For gardeners, barberry is of interest as a raw material base for the manufacture of drinks, jams, home remedies, but the decorative qualities of this plant do not go unnoticed by lovers of beauty - the color of the leaves of varietal barberries is diverse, except for green, they are yellow, purple, motley, spotted and even with border. Barberries also differ in their size - from large bushes of three meters in height to dwarf bushes no higher than 30 cm.
The plant common hawthorn (lat. Crataegus laevigata), or prickly hawthorn, or flattened hawthorn, or glod, or lady-tree is a species of the genus Hawthorn of the Pink family. In the wild, it is found in North America, throughout Europe on the edges, in pine and deciduous forests, on heavy clay soils. The species name of the hawthorn translates as "strong", which indicates the quality of its wood, and perhaps the ability of the plant to live up to 400 years. Hawthorn does not require special care and is grown in culture as an ornamental and medicinal plant.
Cherry plant (lat. Cerasus) is a subgenus of the Plum genus of the Rosaceae family. The Russian name of the tree comes from the same base as the German Weichse, meaning "cherry", and the Latin viscum, which means "bird glue", so the original meaning of the name "cherry" can be defined as "tree with sticky juice". The Latin name for cherry cerasus comes from the name of the city of Kerasunda, on the outskirts of which delicious cherries grew in abundance, which the Romans called Kerasundian fruits, hence the French cerise, Spanish cereza, Portuguese cereja, English cherry and Russian cherry, which the Romans called bird cherry.
Most of the plants are at the peak of their development, fruits ripen on many, many bloom ... It would seem that you walk around the garden and rejoice. But there are several types of work that need to be done right now. Let's start, as always, with trees.
Friends, hello everyone! Autumn has come, and today we will feed fruit trees in order to get a high harvest from them next season.
Walnut tree (lat. Juglans regia) is a species of the genus Nut of the Nut family. Otherwise, this nut is called Voloshsky, royal or Greek. In the wild, walnut grows in western Transcaucasia, northern China, the Tien Shan, northern India, Greece and Asia Minor. Individual specimens of the plant are found even in Norway. But the largest natural hazel trees are located in the south of Kyrgyzstan. Iran is believed to be the birthplace of the walnut, although it has been speculated that it may be of Chinese, Indian or Japanese origin. The first mention of the walnut in historical documents dates back to the 7th-5th century BC: Pliny writes that the Greeks brought this culture from the gardens of Cyrus, the king of Persia.
Pear (lat. Pyrus) is a genus of ornamental and fruit deciduous shrubs and trees of the Pink family. About 60 species of this genus are known. The pear was cultivated in ancient Greece, Rome and Persia. In the wild, the pear grows in the warm zone of Eurasia, as well as in areas with a temperate climate. Today, thanks to the work of breeders, this crop, which has more than one thousand varieties, is also grown in cooler regions - in the Moscow region, in the Urals and in Western Siberia.
Today we will be engaged in autumn pruning of the garden and at the same time close up a hollow on our old Melba apple tree, which was planted at 1972 year.
The plant irga, or currant (lat. Amelanchier) belongs to the genus of the tribe Apple-tree family Rosaceae and is a small tree or deciduous shrub. The Latin name irgi is either Provencal or Celtic in origin and translates as "to bring honey." The British call the irgu a shady shrub, a June berry or a useful berry, and the Americans retained the name given to it by the native inhabitants of the country, the Indians - "Saskatoon".
Today we will be pruning pear and will try to answer in detail your many questions about pruning fruit trees.
I was asked to tell you how to store apple crops in winter, and today I decided to talk about it.
Seedlings with an open root system and green leaves began to be sold on our market. I never tire of being amazed at the entrepreneurial spirit of our people, but do the buyers really not understand what is being offered to them? Let's take a look at this situation today.
Kalina (lat. Viburnum) belongs to the genus of woody flowering plants of the Adox family, of which there are more than 160 species. Representatives of this genus are distributed in the temperate zone of the northern hemisphere, as well as in the Andes, the Antilles and Madagascar. The plant received the Slavic word "viburnum" presumably because of its red, as if red-hot berries. In Slavic culture, there are many legends, tales, sayings and proverbs about viburnum.
The plant hazel, or hazel (lat. Corylus) belongs to the genus of deciduous shrubs or trees of the Birch family. There are about 20 species in the genus, growing in Eurasia and North America and forming undergrowth in coniferous-deciduous forests. The most common species in culture is the common hazel, or hazelnut. Such cultivated types of hazel as Pontic hazel, large and common hazel are often called hazelnuts. Hazel is one of the oldest cultivated plants in Europe.
Not so long ago, an exotic gumi plant, or many-flowered sucker, a distant relative of sea buckthorn, appeared on our site. But if the sea buckthorn is covered with many thorns, then there are few of them on the gumi, and mainly on young shoots. Although when working with a plant it is better not to forget about them.
The almond plant (Prunus dulcis) is a small tree or shrub of the Almond subgenus of the Plum genus of the Rosaceae family. The subgenus unites about 40 species of almonds, but ordinary almonds are more often grown in culture. Even though almonds are considered nuts, they are actually stone fruits. The almond tree comes from the Mediterranean and Central Asia - it appeared in these areas long before our era. Today, almonds, in addition to Central Asia and the Mediterranean, grow in California, China, the Western Tien Shan, the Crimea, the Caucasus, in the vineyards of Slovakia, the Czech Republic and South Moravia.
Medlar, or cup (cup) tree, or ezgil (lat. Mespilus) is a genus of deciduous plants of the Pink family. According to The Plant List, there are only three species in the genus. The word "medlar" is borrowed from the Turkish language, into which it came from Greek. As a cultivated plant, the German medlar, or common loquat, is grown not from Germany, as one might assume, but from South-West Asia and South-Eastern Europe. The medlar was brought to Germany by the Romans. Today, it is found in the wild in Azerbaijan, South Ossetia, Georgia, Armenia, the North Caucasus, the southern coast of Crimea, and even in the central regions of Ukraine.
There are several ways, besides pruning, to shape the crown of a fruit tree and at the same time make it bear fruit more, that is, form more fruit buds, and not kick out long empty shoots. And today we will consider these options.
The nectarine, or bare-fruited peach, is a variety of peach with a plum-like smooth skin. Nectarine has been cultivated in China for over 2000 years. In Europe, the first description of nectarine appears in the 14th century, in English sources the name nectarine was first mentioned in 1616, and the plant gained popularity in Europe already in the 20th century, when large-fruited varieties of nectarine appeared. Today, on an industrial scale, nectarines are grown in the Mediterranean - in Italy, Tunisia, Greece, Cyprus and the countries of the former Yugoslavia. Nectarine is more resistant to diseases and harmful insects than peach, and its winter-hardy varieties are suitable for cultivation even in the Volgograd region.
Let's talk about whitewashing trees. Not everyone knows that they need to be whitewashed twice a year: in spring and autumn.
Sea buckthorn (lat. Hippophae) belongs to the genus of plants of the Lokhov family, which grow along the banks of rivers and lakes mainly on sand or pebbles. Sea buckthorn can be found in the mountains at an altitude of 2100 meters above sea level. In folk medicine, sea buckthorn was used to treat both people and horses in ancient Greece, and although for some reason it was forgotten over time, in recent decades it has again become widely used.
Catalog of fruit trees and shrubs with photos and names
Fruit trees and bushes
Heart-shaped walnut native to Japan. In nature, it can be found on the island...
Fruit trees and bushes
The spectacular Manchurian walnut tree is cultivated mainly in the northern. ..
Fruit trees and bushes
Of all the representatives of the Walnut tree family, black walnut is the most...
Fruit trees and bushes
Flowering plant Asimina (Asimina), or pow-pow is a member of the family ...
Fruit trees and bushes
Woody plant Berber wolfberry, or Chinese wolfberry, or goji berries, ...
Fruit trees and bushes
Common hawthorn (Crataegus laevigata), also called flattened hawthorn, or...
Fruit trees and bushes
Beginning gardeners today increasingly choose apple trees that...
Fruit trees and bushes
Hazel or hazel (Corylus) is a member of the Birch family. This genus...
Fruit trees and bushes
Lemongrass (Schisandra) is a deciduous or evergreen plant,. ..
Fruit trees and bushes thorny,...
Fruit trees and bushes
Bird cherry (Prunus) is a common name for certain species belonging to the genus...
Fruit trees and shrubs
Rosehip (Rosea) - this genus is a member of the Rose family. He has...
Fruit trees and bushes
Cowberry (Vaccinium vitis-idaea) is a berry evergreen shrub. This species is...
Fruit trees and bushes
Common bilberry (Vaccinium myrtillus), also called myrtle bilberry,...
Fruit trees and bushes
Rowan (Sorbus) is a genus of woody plants of the tribe Apple, which is...
Fruit trees and bushes
Crowberry (Empetrum), also called shiksha, or crowberry - this genus is represented by...
Fruit trees and bushes
This type of fruit trees, like apple tree (Malus domestica) is.