JACKSON COUNTY, Fla. (WMBB) – Panhandle farmers are trying to protect their crops from this weekend’s expected freeze. Workers at Cherokee Ranch in Jackson County are paying close attention to the ...
It’s satsuma time in Louisiana. Some plants began ripening in late September, while other varieties will continue to mature through late November on into early December. As one of the best cold-hardy ...
Shenandoah Elementary School kindergartners helped plant satsuma trees on their school campus recently as part of Baton Rouge Green’s City Citrus project. City Citrus was launched four years ago as a ...
Dallas Hartzog knows how to sell a satsuma. One taste, he said, and most people are hooked. “This is the most delicious fruit you will ever put in your mouth,” Hartzog said as he walked through his ...
Most citrus in Texas is grown in the Rio Grande Valley due to that area’s milder winter climate most years. We can grow citrus here in Brazos County by careful choice of types and cold protection ...
"We're all out of hope. We live in Biloxi, Mississippi, and have a lot of satsumas, we call air fruit. The rinds are thick and the flesh is airy and tasteless. What are we doing wrong?" - Michelle ...
JACKSON COUNTY, Fla. (WJHG/WECP) - The citrus industry reigns supreme in the Sunshine State. However, one satsuma farmer in Marianna said this year brought colder temperatures than usual. “The late ...
Citrus is the most popular kind of fruit grown in Louisiana. This time of year, satsumas and other types of citrus are abundant — and delicious. Several biotic and abiotic stresses affect citrus ...
One significant detail that has not been lost to history is that Southeast Texas gardeners love to grow citrus trees. They cultivate orange, grapefruit, pomelo, yuzu, citron, tangelo, lime, lemon, ...
WEST MOBILE, Ala. (WKRG) — The effects of our record snowfall from January are still being felt along the Gulf Coast, especially with one of our fall food favorites: satsumas. Dashcam video shows a ...
Garden columnist Dan Gill answers readers' questions each week. To send a question, email Gill at dgill@agcenter.lsu.edu. We collect rainwater and have been using it on our houseplants. We've noticed ...
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