MINIATURE FRUIT AND NUT TREES
How to grow these tiny, fruit-producing wonders, including varieties chart, the history and future of mini trees, the virtues of miniatures.
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LEFT TO RIGHT: This greenish miniature fruit tree twig has twice as many flower buds as its reddish standard cousin.... Miniature trees are ornamental as well as food-bearing additions to your home . . . . Just look at all the fruit on this miniature Heavenly White peach tree!
(PHOTOS BY THE AUTHOR)
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Now you can actually stoop down to harvest 17 pounds of
fruit . . . from just one tree!
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by Robert Kourik
If you want a fruit or nut tree that's both short and
sweet, plant a genetic dwarf. A recent addition to the
realm of tree crops, the genetic dwarf (or miniature) tree
became available to home gardeners only 20 years ago. The
more familiar semidwarf tree, by contrast, goes back to the
early 1800s. However new, genetic dwarf trees are available
in wide variety — almond, apple, apricot, cherry,
nectarine, and peach. And while there is only one miniature
almond, there are over a dozen cultivars, or varieties, of
genetic dwarf peaches and nectarines.
I'll use the genetic dwarf peach and nectarine as examples,
because these trees are the most readily purchased and the
most productive, and offer the largest selection of
cultivars, I'll also, from here on, use the term preferred
by the tree crops industry — miniature .
DISTINCTIVE
Miniature peaches and nectarines are short, shrubby trees,
rarely growing more than six feet tall and six to ten feet
wide. Their dense canopy reminds me of the "schmoos" in Al
Capp's comic strip of the mid-'60s. Some call the trees
mop-tops. The fancy phrase for this is brachytic
dwarfism (quite a horticultural mouthful), which
refers to the distance between buds — the internode.
The drastically shortened internodes account for the small
size of the tree. As to the aesthetic appeal, you can
decide for yourself; personally, I find the form
attractive.
The buds are so close together that three to five fit in
the length of a thumbnail. Compared to a standard peach,
there are two or more times as many buds occurring over the
same distance. At least one leaf grows below each bud
— thus the thicket of foliage.
THE HISTORY OF MINIATURE TREES
Miniature fruit trees were discovered as natural mutations
of seedling trees. In pursuit of a "naturally" dwarfed
peach, millions of trees were grown in test plots to find
the tiny fraction of seedlings with compact character.
Then, breeders like Floyd Zaiger and Fred Anderson (who
recently died — his work is now continued by Norman
Bradford of LeGrand, California) hand-pollinated the
seedlings with the pollen of top-quality varieties. It took
years of breeding to blend the genes for good taste and
color with the genes for miniature size. The best trees
went to trial plots all over the country for observation.
The best from those trials were then propagated for retail
sales. In all, it took 20 years to complete the first full
cycle of breeding from a natural seedling mutation to a
reliable miniature tree for sale at your local nursery.
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