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  2. Dreaming of summer peaches? Some gardening tips for ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/dreaming-summer-peaches...

    how to grow a peach tree Select a spot that receives at least six to eight hours of sunlight daily and test the soil’s pH . Peaches require a reading between 6.5 and 7.0.

  3. Peach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peach

    Peach trees are prone to a disease called leaf curl, which usually does not directly affect the fruit, but does reduce the crop yield by partially defoliating the tree. Several fungicides can be used to combat the disease, including Bordeaux mixture and other copper-based products (the University of California considers these organic treatments ...

  4. Bactris gasipaes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bactris_gasipaes

    Bactris gasipaes, like most sea-island palms, grows erect, with a single slender stem or, more often, several stems that are up to eight inches (20 cm) thick, in a cluster; generally armed with stiff, black spines in circular rows from the base to the summit. There are occasional specimens with only a few spines.

  5. Flat peach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_peach

    Description. Flat peaches are flatter than fruit of more popular peach varieties. Their skin is yellow and red, and they are less fuzzy than many other peaches. The inside of the flat peach is white in appearance. They are harvested in late spring through the end of summer. [2]

  6. Dwarf Beech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwarf_Beech

    Cultivar group. Tortuosa Group. The dwarf beech, Fagus sylvatica Tortuosa Group, is a rare cultivar group of the European Beech with fewer than 1500 older specimens in Europe. It is also known as twisted beech or parasol beech . It is a wide-spreading tree with distinctive twisted and contorted branches that are quite pendulous at their ends.

  7. Kiggelaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiggelaria

    Kiggelaria africana (also known as the wild peach or umKokoko) is a large, robust, low-branching African tree, and is currently the only accepted species in the genus Kiggelaria. [1] Despite its common name, Kiggelaria africana is not related to the more familiar fruit-producing peach tree ( Prunus persica ) although the leaves do look similar ...

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