We have some cold weather coming next week. Like, cold weather that we don't often get down here. On Tuesday the high will be 29 and the low will be 19. We're just not accustomed to that. We can't drive in it. Our pipes aren't wrapped yet. Our plants and animals aren't ready. I have a lot of work to do in advance of next week. I'm praying it won't be as cold as they say.
I realized I need to get the navel oranges off of the tree. This tree didn't make a single orange last year because the freeze the previous year almost wiped it out. It did kill two of our tangerine trees. We only have this navel orange, a tangerine tree that hasn't made fruit in two years because of the freeze, and a new satsuma tree.
I clipped all of the navel oranges off the tree, dropping them in a big bucket. I have to find a way to make room in a refrigerator so they'll keep if it starts warming up before we can eat them. A fall-back plan is to make freshly squeezed orange juice and freeze what we can't drink. Fresh orange juice is just that absolute best. There's no comparing store bought and especially concentrate to fresh-squeezed.
I can remember perhaps my first experience with fresh orange juice. We were on a family vacation in Florida and stopped at a roadside stand smack dab in the middle of a huge orange grove. Of course they were selling oranges, but they had these plastic 'straw-like' contraption that was sharp on the end. You'd cut into the orange with the straw and squeeze on the orange and suck on the straw and delicious orange juice would flow into your mouth. It was delicious!
The size of the navels on our tree this year are gargantuan. Of course I'm picking out the largest one for comparison, but look at this monster! I have this one side by side a huge lemon that came off the neighbor's tree. Those lemons are twice the size of those you get in the produce department. That navel on the left is ALMOST as big as a cantaloupe.
Here's the orange in the palm of my hand for perspective.
Citrus doesn't do well in frigid temperatures. It's tropical and will easily die. I've lost many a citrus tree to hard freezes. I've tried all sorts of things to try to save them. Mulching them DEEP and HIGH around the trunk, putting tarps over and around them, putting buckets of water stacked around them. None of that worked. The trees are all planted on the south side of the house, so the house serves as a wind break from the north winds. To no avail.
At one of our bee club meetings, a fellow named Jim explained how he saved ALL of his citrus trees. He put a tarp over all of them, ran an extension cord to each tree and put a heat lamp under the tarp. He saved every last tree. I'm going to try out his technique. I don't want to lose our trees!