Residential citrus trees not only keep juice on the table, they help food banks supply fruit to people who need help.
But what does Arizona law say? Where do fruit tree owners fall on this debate ... Kerry Hees, who owns citrus trees in his backyard, said his street is typically very open to sharing each ...
He said his family was the first and last to plant citrus in Orange. By 1974, his father owned the only farm left in the city. Now he fears Yuma, where they got a fresh start, is “gonna go just like ...
About 65 million years ago, dinosaurs lumbered through forests. After they went extinct, things changed — and the effects are still being felt.
For example, research from the University of Arizona revealed water use ... If you want lots of fruit and flowers from your ...
Do your trees runneth over? Has your backyard orchard become a garden of plenty? It's the middle of citrus season here in Arizona and for some, that means bulging fruit trees or yards littered ...
The citrus trees in residential areas like Sun City, Mesa and the Arcadia neighborhood of Phoenix are lasting reminders of the fruit in central Arizona that was once central to the state’s identity.
Those events pushed production back for at least three years, which is what it takes for trees to mature and produce enough fruit. It allowed Arizona growers to breathe. “It's kind of sad that ...
One of those effects, according to new research out of Northern Arizona University ... which gave trees with larger seed sizes and that bore tasty fruit an advantage. As the theory went, larger ...