Growing a tree indoor can sound bizarre and will instantly put an image of a mango tree shooting up your ceiling. Indoor fruit trees can be dwarfed according to the size of your liking and apart from having a mini, completely safe forest-of-sorts in your own home!
If you like fresh fruit, fresh fruit juice and chilled fruit salad served with some sweet vanilla ice-cream, here’s your cue to pot a meyer lemon seedling or that of an apricot one! One of the many requirements apart from a few square metres of space and large amounts of water are the golden rays of sunshine because these trees with elaborate root systems love the sunshine.
Within a year of planting your seedlings, you are likely to find your newly grown fruits on your dining table probably as a freshly squeezed jar of jam or juice! Here are 5 different types of trees that you can grow indoor, using dwarf varieties to fit the size of your liking!
1. Meyer Lemon Tree
The Meyer Lemon Tree is a commonly known indoor tree that yields some delicious lemons that work great with your morning pancake breakfast! Meyer lemon trees require a higher level of humidity than most plants which makes a humidifier in its vicinity beneficial. They also require ample amounts of sunlight and would usually prefer a south-facing-window type of sunshine. In addition, it is very important for their soil to remain moist and not soggy. They have a specific type of fertilizer too and thrive on a high-nitrogen fertilizer. Turns out they are pickier than a Kardashian! However, the benefits that we could reap are endless! Apart from having a rustic looking dwarf tree in the corner of you living room, you can enjoy a cool glass of lemonade at any time of the day.
The Meyer Lemon Tree is a commonly known indoor tree that yields some delicious lemons that work great with your morning pancake breakfast! Meyer lemon trees require a higher level of humidity than most plants which makes a humidifier in its vicinity beneficial. They also require ample amounts of sunlight and would usually prefer a south-facing-window type of sunshine. In addition, it is very important for their soil to remain moist and not soggy. They have a specific type of fertilizer too and thrive on a high-nitrogen fertilizer. Turns out they are pickier than a Kardashian! However, the benefits that we could reap are endless! Apart from having a rustic looking dwarf tree in the corner of you living room, you can enjoy a cool glass of lemonade at any time of the day.
2. Apricot Tree
Lover of sunlight and fearer of frost, this beautiful tree is called “Goldcot” for a reason. This variety of the dwarf apricot tree, along with the delicious apricots they grow will also exhibit a stunning line-up of small, white flowers that add to its charm. One of the main requirements to grow an apricot tree indoors is an immense amount of sunlight and loads and loads of water. The pot needs to be watered until it starts dripping from the drainage holes on the underside of the pot. That’s how much water the tree requires! The tree can grow anywhere from 2 feet to 5 feet and the ‘Moorpark’ dwarf version of the tree is recommended to home owners who live in apartments but still want to reap the benefits of baking an apricot swirl cheesecake at least a few times a month!
Lover of sunlight and fearer of frost, this beautiful tree is called “Goldcot” for a reason. This variety of the dwarf apricot tree, along with the delicious apricots they grow will also exhibit a stunning line-up of small, white flowers that add to its charm. One of the main requirements to grow an apricot tree indoors is an immense amount of sunlight and loads and loads of water. The pot needs to be watered until it starts dripping from the drainage holes on the underside of the pot. That’s how much water the tree requires! The tree can grow anywhere from 2 feet to 5 feet and the ‘Moorpark’ dwarf version of the tree is recommended to home owners who live in apartments but still want to reap the benefits of baking an apricot swirl cheesecake at least a few times a month!
3. Avocado Tree
Avocado plants do absolutely poor in cold temperatures and can thus thrive indoors. Dwarf varieties of the tree are commonly grown house trees and is usually grown by suspending the seed by toothpicks over a glass of water with half of the pit submerged under water. The seed can later be transferred to a container which has a fast-draining potting mix. Pruning the trees as they grow is absolutely necessary because they tend to shoot up like kids who just got hit by puberty with a truck. Pruning tends to keep the trees in balance and more than often require a plank or stick of wood to support the weight of the growing tree. The amount of water the plant requires is enormous but the guacamole is worth it!
Avocado plants do absolutely poor in cold temperatures and can thus thrive indoors. Dwarf varieties of the tree are commonly grown house trees and is usually grown by suspending the seed by toothpicks over a glass of water with half of the pit submerged under water. The seed can later be transferred to a container which has a fast-draining potting mix. Pruning the trees as they grow is absolutely necessary because they tend to shoot up like kids who just got hit by puberty with a truck. Pruning tends to keep the trees in balance and more than often require a plank or stick of wood to support the weight of the growing tree. The amount of water the plant requires is enormous but the guacamole is worth it!
4. Passion Fruit Tree
The passion fruit tree is a plant that grows as a vine and is sufficiently easy to grow indoors on a piece of furniture or on a wall of sorts. It takes about 19 months for a passion fruit seedling to grow into a full-fledged vine in order for it to fruit. It is important to place the seedling in a fairly large pot because of its elaborate root system that prevails below the soil surface irrespective of the size of the vine above. Passion fruit vines aren’t as fussy as our little Miss Meyer Lemon Kardashian and can flourish in any type of soil as long as it is the planter has a good drainage system. The plant would require about 4 hours of direct sunlight daily in order to extend its vine branches and propagate its fruit-making mechanism quicker!
The passion fruit tree is a plant that grows as a vine and is sufficiently easy to grow indoors on a piece of furniture or on a wall of sorts. It takes about 19 months for a passion fruit seedling to grow into a full-fledged vine in order for it to fruit. It is important to place the seedling in a fairly large pot because of its elaborate root system that prevails below the soil surface irrespective of the size of the vine above. Passion fruit vines aren’t as fussy as our little Miss Meyer Lemon Kardashian and can flourish in any type of soil as long as it is the planter has a good drainage system. The plant would require about 4 hours of direct sunlight daily in order to extend its vine branches and propagate its fruit-making mechanism quicker!
5. Nectarine Trees
Yes! You can grow nectarines under your roof too purely with a well-drained loamy soil, 6 hours of sunlight and an efficient drainage system for its water. Nectarine ones that you want to grow in your house needs to be of a dwarf variety thus limiting its height, its fruit production and its flowering capacity to adjust to the indoor environment of a home. Nectarines however, do have specifications of the water content in the soil i.e., they require extremely moist and not soggy soils.
Yes! You can grow nectarines under your roof too purely with a well-drained loamy soil, 6 hours of sunlight and an efficient drainage system for its water. Nectarine ones that you want to grow in your house needs to be of a dwarf variety thus limiting its height, its fruit production and its flowering capacity to adjust to the indoor environment of a home. Nectarines however, do have specifications of the water content in the soil i.e., they require extremely moist and not soggy soils.