KAREN WIGHT -- No Place Like Home
Every garden needs at least one citrus tree. It doesn’t need to be big
to deliver the sweet smell of spring, and it doesn’t need to have a
premier location for you to provide a constant supply of fruit.
Your citrus can be a dwarf tree planted in a decorative pot or a sour
orange hedge to screen a fence. You can make a conventional choice, such
as a navel orange, or a decorative selection, such as a variegated lemon.
Citrus trees and shrubs can be as large as a standard tree or as small
as a miniature dwarf variety. Oranges, lemons, limes and grapefruits are
widely available. More unusual citrus, such as kumquats and tangelos, may
be easily ordered through a nursery or a landscape professional.
The fragrance of citrus blossoms is one of the best parts of a spring
garden. The smell reminds me of Victorian homes with wraparound porches.
Freshly picked grapefruit for breakfast. Midnight sirens alerting men to
light the smudge pots.
Growing up in Riverside meant sharing an appreciation for citrus
groves. It was a lifestyle for many families. The city was founded as a
farming community. Landmarks such as the Parent Navel Orange Tree still
stand.
My high school, Riverside Polytechnic, chose green and orange -- as in
the trees -- for the school colors. UC Riverside was built in the middle
of an orange grove.
The smell of spring in Riverside is a treasured memory. By now, most
of the groves have been sold off and legions of tract houses have sprung
up in their place. The groves still standing in town belong to families
who can afford to be “gentlemen farmers.” Electric heaters have replaced
the smudge pots.
The aging groves have not been renewed with younger trees. Lifestyles
have changed, and the groves are more profitable as real estate
developments than as farmland.
But if your timing is just right on a crisp spring morning, you can
still walk along the irrigation canals and smell the flowers from a few
remaining groves. The cool air combined with fresh citrus blossoms is
nature’s promise of renewal.
It’s a smell I still covet -- and a fragrance I want to share with
you.
Add a handsome citrus to your yard or patio. You can’t lose. Beautiful
glossy green leaves, delicious and decorative fruit, and every spring,
the promise that all things old will be new again.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Sundays.
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