Fruit Varieties I grow as of 2010

Fruit Varieties I grow as of 2010

Scroll down for the List.

I am sometimes asked by friends “What variety of fruit tree should I plant?”  And although many citrus varieties, loquats, figs, avocados, persimmons, and pomegranates are easy to grow locally, recommending other popular fruits is a little trickier.  We live in Sunset zone 22 or USDA zone 10a.  Even though many varieties are sold at the big home improvement stores or similar retailers, many are not well suited to our climate, especially if you don’t live inland.  Around coastal Los Angeles County and other mild areas of Southern California, we don’t usually have enough accumulated cold hours below 45 degrees for many varieties of fruit trees to thrive long term.  Other fruits sometimes need more heat like grapes and pomegranates.  Thus, picking the right variety is one of the most important factors in a successful backyard orchard.

Where to check accumulated chill hours in your region of California: http://fruitsandnuts.ucdavis.edu/chillcalc/index1.htm

climate chill map
University of Maryland Estimated Chilling Hours – Map of the United States

My personal list comes from what I grow, other local gardeners I know have had success growing and harvesting from, or varieties reported as ideal in our climate by at least 3 of my favorite sources.  I omitted a few varieties I don’t care for the fruit on.  I can do that, it is MY list, and I would not want to recommend a fruit tree I don’t like the fruit on . I have slowly been transitioning to plants that need 250 hours of chill or fewer.  Over the years, I have had a few varieties that needed up to 400 hours of winter chilling.  They did bear in some years, but after a few disappointing seasons where the trees suffered from insufficient chilling, I decided to replace them with better, lower chilling choices.

List of Low Chill Fruit Varieties

Varieties on this list that I currently grow are in green.

Apple: Pettingill (started from a Long Beach seedling in 1949 originally),  Dorset Golden, Ein Shimer, Beverly Hills, Anna – needs a pollinator.

dorsett golden apple with anna apple what apples grow in zone 10 b Southern California coast
Dorset Golden Apples on the tree, June 2010

Apricot: I have tried two varieties that were supposed to be good lower chill choices, Katy (400 hours) and Gold Kist (300 hours.) Although they had beautiful foliage and flowers most years, neither had large enough crops to justify continuing to grow them in my tiny yard.  Also, the fruit was fair to bland in comparison to Blenheim / Royal, but that variety is rated for higher chilling hours.  I took the Gold Kist out in 2009 and the Katy out before that in 2004.  I don’t have a good recommendation for Apricot.  If you happen to have an older tree that is producing well, make sure you keep it as long a possible because you are blessed.  I believe, before L.A. County turned into an asphalt jungle, Apricots did better here.  Now with so much concrete and structures, the surrounding terrain holds a little more heat from the day and thus it is a tiny bit warmer around most backyard orchards over night.  My trees were about 5 feet from a block wall and the heat retention could have affected them.

Blackberries: Triple Crownthorn less black berry and Boysenberry are two good choices.  I would guess the needed chilling hours of the Triple Crown to be around 200 hours, since I always get a crop.  Our lightest crop was in 2005 when we didn’t get near as much chilling.  Triple Crown tastes like an Olallie blackberry.

blackberry plant from seedling of knotts berry farm bosenberry plant
Triple Crown Blackberries

In addition, my neighborhood has a few patches of wild thorny blackberry.  The neighbors all call it Hanbury Blackberry and it originally came to the neighborhood when an older neighbor cultivated it from Knott’s Boysenberry in 1973.  It is spread by both birds dropping seeds and tip layering, so it is no longer exactly like Boysen. Hanbury is the best flavored blackberry I have ever had, but pretty thorny.  I have a cultivated patch of it that has survived drought conditions, total neglect, block wall construction, and a tortoise burrowing under it.

Blueberries: Jewel, Misty, O’Neal, Sunshine Blue.
Southern Highbush varieties can grow here with acidifying soil amendments and regular irrigation.  I have not tried Jewel, but it is supposed to need about 200 hours chilling.  I only grow Sunshine Blue now because it is self fruitful, smaller, and attractive in comparison to the others.  I did grow Misty and O’neal for 3 years, but have replaced them.

Cherries: Royal Lee, Minnie Royal (both need cross pollination) These have been growing across the street at my neighbor’s house since I talked her into planting them in 2007.  She has been picking light crops since 2009.

Figs: Most fig varieties to do well around here.  The two commonly grown ones are Brown Turkey and Black Mission.  However, I prefer the flavor of Strawberry Verte and Violette de BordeauxKadota is a recent one a neighbor gave me, but I think it might need more heat to do well.  I am still waiting to pick the first fruits on the Kadota.

Goji or Wolfberry (lycium barbarum) :  I have only been growing it this year, therefore, my experience is limited.  I got a transplant from another gardener that had large clumps for many years in Newport Beach.  It grows kind of like mint or raspberry; it spreads by underground runners and could be come invasive in the right conditions.  The leaves and stems resemble salvias, but it has flowers like other solanaceae family plants.  The fruit is orangeish-red.

Grapes: Many varieties of European table grapes need more summer heat than we get on the coast.   American grapes are more disease resistant and forgiving.  I grow both types.  Some of the many choices for coastal grapes include Fantasy, Black Monukka, Jupiter, Venus, Concord, Ruby, Glendale, Candice, Flame, Niabell, Perlette (similar to Thompson, but not quite as sweet.)

Kiwi: Vincent (female variety that needs a male plant to pollinate, like Tomuri, or other Kiwi listed as “Male”)

Nectarines: Desert Dawn, Desert Delight, Panamint, Pioneer (150-350)
Southern Belle is an genetic ultra dwarf (150-300 ) *I also grow Snow Queen, but it doesn’t always do as good so it is not part of my recommended list.

Peaches: August Pride, Babcock (150-350,) Bonita, Desert Gold (I don’t like the fruit of this one,) Earligrande, Tropicberta, and Saturn.  There is a new variety from a local seedling called “Long Beach.”  It is listed at 200 hours, but was just introduced to the public this year. Bay Laurel Nursery carries it, and I might have to try growing it!

*I also grow Red Baron, but it isn’t always dependable so it is not part of my recommended list.  The crop this year was light.

Pears: Hood, but others are listed at the sources at the bottom of this post.

Plum: Beauty, Burgundy, Mariposa, Methley, Santa Rosa, Satsuma (300 hours) many plums need a second variety for a pollinator.

Pomegranante: Sweet, Eversweet.  I know some gardeners that have success with the popular Wonderful, but it needs to be the hottest sunniest part of the yard to do good here on the foggy coastline.

Raspberries: My favorite is by far Baba Red Raspberry, sometimes called Bababerry. I also like Anne, a Yellow raspberry variety.  Over the last 13 years, I have tried Caroline, Rosanna, Josephine, Indian Summer, Heritage, and Kiwigold.  Baba comes back year after year, regardless of the how mild or extreme the winter was here, and it doesn’t seem to need much chill.

There are a number of excellent sources available to help the backyard gardener decide what to plant on the internet.  CRFG is one of my favorites, but here are a few others:

Bay Laurel Nursery has a good list as well as nice supply of the ideal varieties: http://www.baylaurelnursery.com/catalog/lowChillVarieties.html

Sunset Western Garden Book

California Backyard Orchard, Univ. of Calif. Resource for Fruit and Nut Crops: http://homeorchard.ucdavis.edu/general-tree.html

4 thoughts on “Fruit Varieties I grow as of 2010

  1. I would love to pre-order some Baba raspberries and any other berry plants you still have available.

  2. Thanks Leanne,

    Very interesting……I’m glad you had those results ’cause it encourages me to go ahead give Triple Crown a try. Triple Crown was a variety I had decided to plant until reading about the chill hours needed for its berry production. Thanks for sharing your experience with it……

    RR in Texas

  3. RE: Triple Crown needs 700+ hours I am told

    Curious about:

    “…..Triple Crown thorn less black berry and Boysenberry are two good choices. I would guess the needed chilling hours of the Triple Crown to be around 200 hours, since I always get a crop…..”

    I want to plant TC, but after seeing that it requires 700 + hours of chill time, I pretty much decided against it. I am in Zone 9 just west of Houston, TX.
    Our average chill hours are suppose to be 400-600 in my county, so I was giving up on the idea of being able to get TC to produce here.

    What zone are you located in…? What is your county’s avg. chill hours?

    Thanks,

    RR

    1. I am on the boarder of 10a and 10b. My area usually gets 200 to 400 chill hours. When I planted the Triple Crown I didn’t know what the chill hours where since I bought it from the California Rare Fruit Growers at the Green Scene, maybe in 2002 or 2003. It wasn’t until more than a year later that I read it was rated for higher chill than what we get, but by then it was in the ground and flowering for me, so I left it and have been happy with it. I can grow it just fine, so I think the reports are over compensating.

      Our closest pomology weather station results:
      http://fruitsandnuts.ucdavis.edu/chillcalc/chilldatachoose.cfm?Station=174&type=chill

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