This is a public-interest archive. Personal data is pseudonymized and retained under GDPR Article 89.

Re: Most cold tolerant lemon


Dear Cathe,

It is very difficult to make a prediction.  But the areas where apples grow here, gets snowfall and the minimum temperature can go down upto -5 C.  There are no trials carried out on its cold resistance.  I cannot say if it will resist -10-12 C.  But it will be worth trying.

Here is the Fruitipedia link for it:

http://www.fruitipedia.com/galgal.htm

It has a quite long range of climate and starts growing from subtropical areas.  It grows semi-wild.  It is a very popular fruit and widely used for pickling and as a souring agent in preparing Indian dishes.  

It is more near to lemon and the common English name is "Hill Lemon".

It is a better sour fruit than the common European lemon and should be promoted.  About 20 years ago, I had written an article on it in POMONA, the quarterly magazine of the North American Fruit Explorers.  The article evoked a great interest and I had received over 100 letters (there was no e-mail during those days) in response to that article.

The season for galgal will start soon and I can send few seeds to those who are interested in trying it.

Dr. Chiranjit Parmar
www.fruitipedia.com
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Cathe' 
  To: parmarch_mnd@dataone.in 
  Sent: Monday, November 03, 2008 7:08 AM
  Subject: Re: Most cold tolerant lemon


  Dr. Chiranjit Parmar,

  Can you help me find out if Galgal would grow here in the mountains of California. I am in a zone 7. Meaning that it can get down to 5 to 10 degrees F or  -12 to -15 C?
  Thank you. and where would I find this Galgal for sale?
  Thanks very much for what you are doing for fruit worldwide,
  Cathe' Fish





  On Mon, Nov 3, 2008 at 6:20 PM, Dr. Chiranjit Parmar <parmarch_mnd@dataone.in> wrote:

    Dear all,

    Do you know which is the most cold tolerant lemon?  It is cultivated, used extensively and can grow even with apples.

    If not, see this week's "Fruit Fact" in Fruitipedia.

    Dr. Chiranjit Parmar
    www.fruitipedia.com

    7.3/5.0
    This incoming message has been identified by the UCD central filters as
    possible spam.  This attachment is provided so that you can review the
    reasons the message was tagged, and to assist with additional filtering
    if you wish to supplement the central filters with your own local rules.

    If you have further questions please email ithelp@ucdavis.edu for
    assistance.

    Content analysis details:   (7.3 points, 5.0 required)

     pts rule name              description
    ---- ---------------------- --------------------------------------------------
     3.5 RCVD_IN_UCDXBL         RBL: Appears in XBL
                               [59.94.247.213 listed in xbl.ucdavis.edu]
     1.6 RCVD_IN_NJABL_PROXY    RBL: NJABL: sender is an open proxy
                               [59.94.247.213 listed in combined.njabl.org]
     2.2 DATE_IN_FUTURE_12_24   Date: is 12 to 24 hours after Received: date
     0.0 HTML_MESSAGE           BODY: HTML included in message
     0.0 BAYES_50               BODY: Bayesian spam probability is 40 to 60%
                               [score: 0.4549]





_______________________________________________
gardenwriters mailing list
gardenwriters@lists.ibiblio.org
http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/gardenwriters

GWL has searchable archives at:
http://www.hort.net/lists/gardenwriters

Send photos for GWL to gwlphotos@hort.net to be posted
at: http://www.hort.net/lists/gwlphotos

Post gardening questions/threads to
&quot;Gardenwriters on Gardening&quot; &lt;gwl-g@lists.ibiblio.org&gt;

For GWL website and Wiki, go to
http://www.ibiblio.org/gardenwriters



Other Mailing lists | Author Index | Date Index | Subject Index | Thread Index