Growing your own Lemons and Limes

Growing your own Lemons and Limes

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My favorite place to visit in the world is Italy. I cannot get enough of the history, art, architecture, food, and landscape. All over Italy, fruit trees are growing. Many Italians have their own olive, lemon, and lime trees growing outside on their verandas and herbs growing on windowsills.

Limes trees growing on the patio at Borgo della Marmotta retreat center in Spoleto, Italy

To my delight, on a visit to an Italian friend of mine originally from Milan, I saw a lemon tree growing in her Maryland sunroom! Mita explained to me that she started the tree outside in the spring and had moved it inside for the winter. The tree was covered with lemons! It was purchased locally at a garden store one spring and was just a small stick. Within a few years, this small tree was producing many fruits.

Lemon tree in Mita’s sunroom in Maryland

Lemon and lime trees are good trees to grow in pots. They are small trees that produce fruit even when they are small, just a few feet in height. The trees need year-round warmth so growing them in pots in the mid-Atlantic climate is crucial. Once the roots and plants are established outside, they can easily survive indoors in a sunny place over the winter.

Lime trees in Spoleto, Italy

Tips for keeping citrus trees healthy in an inside pot:

  • Add soil when the roots grow above the soil
  • Keep it near a window that gets many hours of sunlight each day
  • Water once a week but spray the leaves every few days with water to keep it humid so the leaves do not dry out.
  • Cage the tree to support its branches. This is particularly important when it produces fruit as the lemons are heavy for the plant’s small branches.

I am going to look for Lemon and Lime tree root stock this spring locally at garden centers. I will keep you posted!

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Comments ( 6 )

  1. Randi
    I love this idea. Thanks for sharing!
    • HilarySchwab
      Thank you Randi. You could probably find starter plants now at local nurseries in Naples, Florida. The climate there would be perfect for year round outside citrus growing in planters.
  2. Stephanie
    Mita, thank you so much for the lemon tree tips. :) We have been growing one with our class and did not think about spraying the leaves also. I think that’s exactly what they need.
    • HilarySchwab
      Thank you for your comment Stephanie. Remember that it needs many hours of daylight a day and some warmth to survive the winter. Good luck!
  3. Pamela Fleming
    Ooohh..great idea!
    • HilarySchwab
      Thanks Pam.