Maris
Registered:1405760549 Posts: 110
Posted 1414916821
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#1
I have a question, does anybody have it in ground in this zone? And what about the fruit? Do fruit are ripe or season is too short for them?
__________________Lanckorona, Poland
Elevation 455 m (1493 ft) (49° 49')
USDA 6
Wish list: My area in USDA ZONE 9 :D
My varieties: Panache, Peretta, Napolitana, Michurinska-10 and probably Brown Turkey.
ediblelandscapingsc
Registered:1343459620 Posts: 348
Posted 1414918083
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#2
haven't tried it yet but heard good things about it being hardy, as far as the ripening well in zone 6 thats another story. Pomegranates need heat during the ripening period for proper development of flavor. In areas where high temperatures are low 70's early September may have trouble ripening any pomegranate. That said if you got the room try it. Ff you want to also try Kaim-Anor, Kara- Kalinski, Saartuzki, or Sakerdze let me know maybe we can trade a few cuttings.
__________________ South Carolina zone 7b-8
xenil
Registered:1325697702 Posts: 91
Posted 1414922663
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#3
Hello! Bass Has this variety in ground, in Pennsylvania. I think he is in the same zone like us. He got ripe fruit from this variety in October. But first he have to confirm my statement. But before you start to search for this variety, you have to know here in Europe we have a very hard thing. The only nursery who sells this variety in my knowledge is Pierres baud.
__________________ Kristian Location:Hungary,zone 6B Currently growing: Freckled Beauty, Saint Anthony, Saint Maritn, Martinete (Pérola), Armenian, White Marseilles, Ronde De Bordeaux, Hardy Chicago, Marseilles Vs Black, Gino's Black, Natailna, Sal's El, Laradek Ebt, Green Michurinska, Michurinska 10 , Vagabond, Negretta, Negronne, Orsara, Dalmatie, Laradek Ebt, Adriatic Jh, Improved Celeste, Kútfeji Black, Black Plate, Deszki mézédes
Vladis
Registered:1390659900 Posts: 352
Posted 1414930806
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#4
В России также растут гранаты. Урожай сегодня.
__________________ Зона 8Б ,Туапсе, Россия.
MGorski
Registered:1399823521 Posts: 370
Posted 1414933229
· Edited
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#5
That's a beautiful Pom, thanks for the picture Vladis. I met a local Syrian man who has a pomegranate he calls High Lemon. It is a good one for my zone, no dieback from last winter and plant is full of fruits this year. His fig tree also survived the winter.
Mike in Hanover, VA
__________________ Zone-7, previously Mescalito
GRamaley
Registered:1357742252 Posts: 791
Posted 1414937188
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#6
I'm trying to get a few Pom going, that one is a beauty I will have to look for it!!
__________________ Gloria
---------------
7a, maybe 8
Bass
Registered:1188959030 Posts: 2,428
Posted 1414940889
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#7
For 8 years I've grown salavataki 2 years after planting in ground I got the first blooms and a couple small pomegranates. After that it was producing 30-50 large pomegranates and ripened mid October. They were delicious. Last winter it remind constantly below -5°F for several days and many of the branches died back. The tree is alive now but not bearing this year. In selling my house along with many of my in ground trees now.
__________________ Pennsylvania http://www.treesofjoy.com https://www.facebook.com/pages/Trees-of-Joy/110193909021138
andreas
Registered:1401724296 Posts: 372
Posted 1414942568
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#8
@ Bass with your fig collection??? you will probably find a buyer from this forum!!!!!!!! good luck with that and i hope you will create many wonderfull memories in the next
__________________andreas-patras Patra Peloponnisos Greece zone..9a
Charlie
Registered:1404043833 Posts: 1,214
Posted 1414945299
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#9
My Salavatsky looks dead. It got down to 32 F here Saturday morning. All the leaves are dead anyways. Did it just go dormant? New tree, about 18" tall.
__________________ Zone 7A ~ Fort Smith area Arkansas
padsfan
Registered:1315885369 Posts: 205
Posted 1414948936
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#10
I would highly recommend Parfianka. It's the best pom in many taste tests and a beautiful bush in my yard.
__________________ "Padres Fan" San Diego, California USA Sunset Zone 24- coastal So. Cal
MGorski
Registered:1399823521 Posts: 370
Posted 1414957300
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#11
Excuse my misspelling of lemon, Maris, I hope you don't mind me posting this picture in your thread.
High Lemon, cold hardy Syrian pomegranate-
Attached Images
image.jpg (446.07 KB, 32 views)
image.jpg (326.56 KB, 28 views)
__________________ Zone-7, previously Mescalito
indestructible87
Registered:1368407095 Posts: 548
Posted 1414957571
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#12
I planted a small salavatski this year. I don't know if it'll survive here in pittsburgh though.
__________________ Travis Pittsburgh, PA
HarveyC
Registered:1212433117 Posts: 3,294
Posted 1414984713
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#13
Quote:
Originally Posted by padsfan I would highly recommend Parfianka. It's the best pom in many taste tests and a beautiful bush in my yard.
Parfianka is very good but would not stand a chance in zone 6 I suggest zone 6 folks try Salavatski as well as Kazake, Al Sirin Nar, and Sarkerdze. All of these have withstood temps of 0F or below in Byron Georgia (plus some others which I forget right now).
__________________Harvey - Correia Farms Isleton, CA (Sacramento County) USDA zone 9b, Sunset zone 14
http://www.figaholics.com https://www.facebook.com/Figaholics
FigAlot
Registered:1406610099 Posts: 14
Posted 1414997551
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#14
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Vladis В России также растут гранаты. Урожай сегодня. That looks fantastic, I love a good pomegranate!!
Rewton
Registered:1291943117 Posts: 1,946
Posted 1415029662
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#15
In the Spring of 2013 I planted a Salavatsky pom. next to a south facing brick wall of my house. Other than adding 2-3 inches of shredded leaves around the base I didn't protect it for the winter. Well, as you all know we had a much harsher winter than normal. It died back to the ground and twice sent up shoots from ground level only to have the shoots die. It finally died completely. I decided to replace it with a variety called "Favorite" a.k.a. "Lyubimy" which I obtained from Edible Landscaping Inc. According to persianmd2orchard's results it is more cold hardy than Salavatsky although the latter gives slightly larger fruits.
__________________ Steve MD zone 7a
snaglpus
Registered:1244258188 Posts: 4,072
Posted 1415040333
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#16
Vladis
Posts 92 Member Since 01/25 Last Active Offline 2 hours ago Vladis, what variety of Pomegrante is that? And try to type in English please. :)
__________________ Dennis Charlotte, North Carolina/Zone 8a
Vladis
Registered:1390659900 Posts: 352
Posted 1415042635
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#17
Name of the variety is unknown. I found by chance in 2013. Fruits of last fall were about 200 grams. This fruit weighs 92 grams. Taste sweet and sour, juicy, hard seeds.
__________________ Зона 8Б ,Туапсе, Россия.
snaglpus
Registered:1244258188 Posts: 4,072
Posted 1415043335
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#18
ok, great! thank you! I got quite a few poms in pots. I need to give them more attention than my figs! I think I will start today!
__________________ Dennis Charlotte, North Carolina/Zone 8a
Shanejennings
Registered:1451414506 Posts: 61
Posted 1452120138
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#19
Quote:
Originally Posted by MGorski Excuse my misspelling of lemon, Maris, I hope you don't mind me posting this picture in your thread.
High Lemon, cold hardy Syrian pomegranate-
Can I get cuttings from this Syrian pomegranate? I would love to try it!
Thanks,
Shane