It's been an absolutely beautiful weekend in the San Francisco Bay Area. After 15 days of cold rain- well, what passes for cold here, which means it was in the mid-30s and very wet - the past week warmed up nicely, and the temperature hovered near 70* both weekend days. I took advantage of lovely weather and worked diligently in the yard.
When we bought this house 8 years ago the sellers told us the lemon tree had died after a winter cold spell. I believe one of the reasons to own a house is so you can plant a Meyer Lemon tree, so I planted 2. Hey, they're true dwarf trees, and you really can't have too many lemons, can you? These little trees are supposed to be around 6 feet tall, max, and it has been at least 3 or 4 years since they'd been pruned.
(Meyer lemons are a cross between an orange and a lemon, and the resulting fruit is sweeter and more fragrant than other lemons, the skin is brighter in color and smooth, and the fruits are often round or oval.)
Citrus gets non-productive branches called watershoots, rather like suckers on roses. The water shoots on these little lemon trees were about 10 feet high.
The water shoots are the big branches that seem to be spouting from the top of the trees. Some of the water shoots were 10 feet tall! They also have ugly thorns, often 2" long!
That's a thorn on a water shoot. For size comparison, those are normal size Meyer lemons, about 3" in diameter. (Thorns are the reason I don't wear my hand-knit socks what doing yard work like this.)
Three hours later, the green bin was full to overflowing, there were branches piled up waiting for an empty bin, and I had a laundry basket full of wonderful Meyer lemons.
Both trees are about 6 feet tall now, and are still covered with ripe fruit, small green fruit and blossoms.
My knitting is boring, even to me, at the moment. Progress is being made on the Serape sweater and he crushed raspberries wonderful wallaby. Six inches of either doesn't look much different than 5 inches did, so no photos!