Growing almonds in the desert makes a lot of sense. Pistachios are another good choice but there's not as many to pick from. Selecting the best almond can be a little daunting but stick with the genetic dwarfs that are available. Join me in desert horticulture and find out which varieties are best and why.
Stand Alone Pages
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Tuesday, April 2, 2019
Selecting the Best Almond Tree for the Desert
Read along while you listen to my podcast on Desert Horticulture.
Almonds – Most almonds do extremely well in southern
Nevada and make excellent landscape trees.
Recommended
rootstock: Nemaguard but others have performed adequately
over the long term.
Top Choice
· All in One – Genetic Dwarf, Self
pollinating
·
Garden Prince – Genetic Dwarf, Self pollinating,
flowers white with purple
Notable
Mention
·
Price
·
Nonpariel
Under
Review
·
Carmel
·
Neplus Ultra
The stage in almond growth when green almonds are harvested |
Peach twig borer infesting the outer husk on almond |
Monday, April 1, 2019
Apparent Relationship of Tomato and Arthritis
Vegetables in the Nightshade family, the tomato family if you want, have been suspected to contribute to crippling arthritic pain. This article published by Dr. Norman Childers in 1993 goes into this in detail. The nightshade family of vegetables include tomato, peppers, potatoes, eggplant and others.
Relationship of Eating Nightshades and Arthritis
Relationship of Eating Nightshades and Arthritis
Desert Horticulture Podcast: Selecting the Best Apple and Pear
Apples and pears are best grown a bit out of the hot arid climate zone of the Southwest. But there are some varieties that have performed well. Join me in Desert Horticulture and find out which ones I found to be the best producers, both in levels of production and quality, in our hot desert climate. This episode includes Asian pears as well as desert pears.
Selecting the Best Apples and Pears - Yes, Asian Pears Too!
Read this as you are listening to my podcast, "Selecting the Best Apples and Pears". I will mention updates on this list that was created in 2009.
Apples – Not all apples do well in southern Nevada
and range from “best apple ever tasted” to “tasteless” depending on variety
Recommended dwarfing rootstock: M111; avoid extreme
dwarfing rootstocks due to fruit sunburn because of too much fruit exposure.
Top
Choice
·
Dorsett Golden – Early Season, yellow fruit
·
Pink Lady (Cripps Pink) – Late Season, red over green fruit
Notable
Mention
·
Anna – Early season
·
Einshemer – Early season
·
Fuji – Mid season
·
Gordon – Mid season
·
Mutsu (Crispin) – Mid season
·
White Winter Pearmain – Mid to late season
Under
Review
·
Akane
·
Arkansas Black
·
Asmead Kernel
·
Babe (Genetic Dwarf)
·
Gala
·
Granny Smith
·
Red Fuji
·
Scarlet Sentinel Columnar
·
Yellow Newton Pippen
Asian Pear – Performs surprisingly well in our
climate and we are currently working on increasing the size of the fruit
Recommended Rootstock:
OHxF333 but others have performed well
Under Review
· Chojuro
·
Hosui
· Kikusui
· Shinko
· Shinseiki
·
Tsu Li
·
Twentieth Century
· Ya Li
Pear, European – European pears do quite well in
taste but may not have the same visual appeal as commercially grown pears. Most
are “dessert” pears and grown for fresh eating.
Recommended Rootstock:
Many
Top Choice
· Kieffer – Salad pear, nicknamed “Jicama pear” with
flavor resembling an Asian pear, good for canning and baking and virtually pest
free
Honorable Mention
·
Bartlett
·
Monterrey
·
Red Bartlett
Under
Review
·
Bosc
·
California
·
Comice
·
D’Anjou
·
Hood
Strawberries Available By the Flat- Order Now
Everybody excited about strawberries coming in this
year? I know I am! This past winter was CRAZY, and I'm ready for
some summer in a pint. :) As always, please help spread the word
about these yummy berries, so we can hopefully get enough orders to cover our
expenses. :)
These farmers are the same as
our previous years - for those who are ordering for the first time, both
farmers fit our criteria for the small family farmer that does what they can,
and truly believes in good, healthy, pesticide-free produce. They are
good, humble people, which is exactly who we love to support, right?
Most of you know the drill - we
have conventional and organic flats available. Conventional flats are $23
an OPEN flat and organic flats are $30 an open flat - open flats are the kind
you get at the farmer's markets, NOT the grocery store. They are roughly
12 pounds a flat, which equates to around 12 pints of jam on average. The
conventional berries come from a farm that supports integrative pest control,
which means they utilize pesticides only after other methods have been
unsuccessful and they risk losing a whole crop. If this is your first time ordering
- PLEASE NOTE - open flats are picked fresh and are NOT sprayed with
preservatives, making them more susceptible to mold quicker than berries from
your typical grocery store. Therefore, make sure you make the necessary
arrangements to sort through your flats and either process or wash them in a
vinegar bath to keep them fresher, longer.
EVERYONE ORDERING - place your order by responding to my
email with
Name:
Number of flats:
Organic or conventional:
Delivery location:
Contact number on the day of delivery:
You can pay by venmo, paypal,
or by sending a check, cash, or money order to Elizabeth Kay, 173 East
Fiddlers Canyon Road, Unit 1, Cedar City, Utah 84721, by April 8th. For
Venmo, my id is @Elizabeth-Kay-3. Please make sure your information is in
the notes so I can link it to your order info above. If you live in Cedar
and would like to pay in person, that's fine too - just text me at 702.219.6700
to meetup. PLEASE DO NOT WAIT UNTIL APRIL 10th TO SEND YOUR PAYMENT IN
THE MAIL. Group orders need to pay by April 8th unless otherwise
arranged.
FOR PAYPAL: You are welcome to pay me through paypal
IF you use these instructions - login to your paypal account and click on
"pay or send money." Then, MAKE SURE to click on the "Send to
friends and family in the US" - do NOT click on "pay for goods and
services" unless you want me to track you down and make you pay more for
your berries. ;) Next, type in my phone number - 7022196700
and the amount of your total. Leave in the notes the name you placed your
order under so I can make sure your payment gets applied to the right order,
your contact number for that day, and your delivery location. Then, click
on send payment. :)
PLEASE MAKE SURE IF THIS EMAIL
IS FORWARDED TO YOU, THAT YOU SEND ME YOUR INFORMATION WITH YOUR PAYMENT, so I
can confirm with you or the person you order through. :)
Deliveries are scheduled for:
Las Vegas - April 12th, 7pm, Mountain Crest Park off of Lone Mountain and Durango
Las Vegas - April 12th, 7pm, Mountain Crest Park off of Lone Mountain and Durango
St George - April 13th, place and time to be determined
(please let me know if you are interested in being a delivery location)
Cedar City - April 13th, 645
North 400 West, Cedar (across from the Sunroc lumber yard behind the 2 big red
barns and storage containers), 8am
Please mark your location when
you order, and I will be sure to keep you updated on any changes. If the
time doesn't work for you, and you cannot arrange for someone else to pickup
your order for you, you may text me at 702 219 6700 to see if a different
time works for the both of us. On the scheduled day of delivery, please
realize that I have many people checking for delivery updates - if you do not
hear me respond right away, you can try calling me or my husband, Josh, at 702.533.4940.
:)
Any questions, please first make sure it has not already
been answered in this email. Then, text is preferable to calling me - 702.219.6700.
I also still have memberships to Frontsight Firearms Training Institute, just outside of Las Vegas. Check out their offerings at www.frontsight.com. The memberships I offer are diamond. We got free memberships through a family member, and so we are offering them to you at the cost of the transfer fee only, which is $100. Let us know if you or a family member may be interested.
Whew!! I think that's
it! If I missed something, I'm sorry, just let me know! Also, let
me know if you'd like to be taken off of this list.
Can't wait to see all of my friends once again! :)
Elizabeth Kay
Sunday, March 31, 2019
Desert Horticulture Podcast: Selecting the Best Apricot and Plum
Want to make sure the apricot or plum you selected was a good one? Join me on this Desert Horticulture podcast to learn what I know about the varieties that do the best in a desert climate. And this includes aprium and pluot! Join me in Desert Horticulture and my many years of growing fruit in the Mojave Desert.
Selecting the Best Apricot and Plum for the Desert
Listen to my podcast, "Selecting the Best Apricot and Plum while you read through this list.
Apricot – Most apricots do well in southern Nevada
and have wonderful flavor
Recommended rootstock: Nemaguard preferred but
others have performed adequately over
the long term.
Top
Choice
·
Blenheim (Royal) - early
·
Flavor Delight (Aprium; actually a plum apricot
hybrid but fruit marketed as an apricot) very early
·
Gold Kist – very early
·
Moorpark - early
·
Royal Rosa – excellent landscape tree, very early
Notable Mention
·
Canadian
Blenheim White - early
·
Chinese - early
·
Early Golden - early
·
Flora Gold – very early
·
Katy – excellent landscape tree, very early
Under
Review (Early results are good on all)
·
Autumn Glo
·
Early Autumn
·
Goldcot
·
Harcot
·
Tomcot
Aprium – Plum apricot hybrid that does extremely
well in our climate
Recommended Rootstock:
Nemaguard but others have performed adequately over the long term.
Top Choice
·
Flavor Delight – See apricot since the fruit is
marketed as an apricot, very early
Plum – Plums do well in our climate. The most
common fresh plums are Japanese plums.
Recommended Rootstock: Citation but other rootstocks have performed adequately over the long term.
Top Choice
·
Santa Rosa
·
Santa Rosa, Weeping – landscape tree form of Santa
Rosa
·
Emerald Beauty
Honorable
Mention
·
Beauty
·
Burbank
·
Burgundy
·
Elephant Heart
·
French Improved – Prune
·
Italian Prune – Prune
Under
Review
·
Catalina
·
Green Gage – European plum
Plumcot – Apricot plum hybrid
Under
Review
Plum Parfait
Pluot – A very complex hybrid of apricot and plum
that has developed a very high sugar level and complex flavors when tree
ripened
Recommended Rootstock: Citation but other rootstocks have performed adequately over the long term.
Top Choice
· Flavor King
· Flavor Queen
Honorable Mention
·
Flavor Supreme
Under
Review
·
Dapple Dandy
·
Flavorosa
·
Flavor Delight
·
Flavor Finale
·
Flavor Grenade
·
Geopride
Desert Horticulture Podcast: Picking the Best Nectarine and Peach for the Desert
Selecting the best nectarine and peach tree is confusing - there are so many different varieties to pick from! This podcast helps you sort through some of the varieties that grow best in our desert climate. Learn some tips about selecting varieties by an expert who has grown dozens of varieties and conducted blind taste tests on each to determine which are the best. Learn why nectarines take an extra commitment when growing this fabulous fruit in a desert climate.
Pick the Best Nectarine and Peach for the Desert
Read this extract from my list of recommended fruit trees while you listen to my podcast titled, "Pick the Best Nectarine and Peach". Connect to it through my blog.
Nectarine – Nectarines do well in our climate but
vary in fruit quality and some taste pretty bad.
Recommended Rootstock: Citation but others have performed adequately over the long term.
Top
Choice
·
Arctic Star
Honorable
Mention
·
Arctic Glo
·
Arctic Rose
·
Desert Dawn
·
Desert Delight
·
Double Delight
Under
Review
·
Arctic Gold
·
Garden Delight – Miniature
·
Goldmine
·
Independence
·
Liz’s Late
·
Necta Zee – Miniature
·
Panamint
Peach – Peaches do extremely well in our climate
and have received praise from internationally recognized chefs.
Recommended Rootstock: Citaton but others have performed adequately over the long term.
Top
Choice
·
Babcock – White, mid season
·
Eva’s Pride – Early season
·
May Pride – Early season
·
Mid Pride – Mid season
·
Starks Saturn – Donut peach, white flesh, mid
season
Honorable
Mention
·
Arctic Supreme - white flesh, mid season
·
Desert Gold -
·
Earlitreat – Earliest producer
·
Early Amber – Early season
·
Early Elberta -
·
Elberta – Mid season
·
FlordaPrince – Early season
·
Red Baron – Showy flowers, good landscape tree, mid
season
·
Red Haven – Mid season
Under
Review
·
Arctic Jay – White
·
Carnival
·
Double Jewel
·
Elegant Lady - White
·
Fairtime
·
Gold Dust
·
Harken
·
Indian Free
·
July Elberta (Kim)
·
Nectar White - White
·
O’Henry – Late season
·
Rio Oso Gem
·
Snow Beauty - White
·
Snow Giant - White
·
Snow King - White
·
Strawberry Free - White
·
Sugar Lady - White
·
Summerset
·
Sweet Bagel – Donut peach, yellow
·
Tra Zee – Late season
·
Tropic Snow -White
·
White Heath Cling - White
·
White Lady – White
Peach, Miniature – These are typically peaches
which are genetic dwarf and fruit quality is often not as comparable to
standard peach trees.
Top
Choice
·
Bonanza – Mid season
Honorable
Mention
·
El Dorado – Mid season
·
Pix Zee – Mid season
Under
Review
·
Honey Babe
·
Garden Gold
·
Garden Sun