If your trees or lawn start the season looking more lemon than lime, you may be seeing iron chlorosis—a common nutrient ...
A person cutting fruit from a lemon tree - Kathrin Ziegler/Getty Images Growing a lovely, healthy lemon tree that allows you to pick a ripe fruit whenever your recipe calls for it is not that ...
QUESTION: My lemon tree started sending out new growth, but it's deformed, twisted and has a silvery appearance. It almost looks like there are trails running through the insides of some of the leaves ...
Q: My Meyer lemon is about seven feet tall and is covered with small, green fruit, but it has lost most of its leaves. What should I do? A: Citrus tend naturally to drop some leaves during blossoming ...
A: Heat and drought possibly could be the cause. The area is at least 10 inches behind in rainfall this year, and many trees are dropping foliage they can't support. Slow, deep watering to moisten the ...
Citrus leafminer moths are seldom seen. They’re most active from early morning to evening and spend days resting on the back of leaves. Females lay eggs on the undersides of a tree’s newest growth.
Q: I am having a problem with my lemon tree. The leaves start out normally, then curl and have a whitish/grayish line on them. I am hoping that someone can help me figure out what to do. A: An insect ...
A: In order to produce lemons, a lemon flower’s stigma must receive pollen that contains the flower’s sperm. More specifically, the sperm in the pollen grains must be transferred to the stigma, found ...