
The University of California’s Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources has a new on-line publication for you, The California Backyard Orchard.
One thing that many southern Californians neglect is an edible home landscape. Adding fruit trees and edible landscaping brings you food of course, but it also provides food and habitat for native wildlife, provides shade, reduces noise, and helps brings a sense of quite to our lives.
The site opens with an examination of many benefits of home orchards. This examination also includes the work involved as well as the rewards. This is an important consideration if you have never grown your own in the past. Is this really for you?
The section The Big Picture is a complete education in itself. From the basics of climate and how that relates to different fruits, all the way through successful production. It lays all the material out so it is easy to locate just the articles you need.
The site is packed with information such as detailed looks at 2 dozen types of fruit and nut trees for the home orchard, including berries, citrus, loquat, persimmon and pomegranate.
The site also covers the basics of site selection and considerations, tree selection, propagation, planting, care, irrigation, pests, diseases, pruning, training, harvest and more…
For more information like this, be sure visit the University of California Garden Web.




