articledblogs.com articledblogs.com articledblogs.com
Search:    Site Home >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms & Conditions >> Place Your Link >> Submit Article   
Add Url
 

Recreation & Entertainment

Academics & Learning

Hotels & Travel

Healthcare & Treatment

Outdoor & Sports

Relationship & Lifestyle

Computers & Networking

Companies & Business

Automobile & Automotive

Events & News

Shopping Online

Property & Estate

Policies & Law

Online & Indoor Games

Science & Space

Art & Creative

Society & Issues

Family & Home

Employment & Careers

Banking & Finance

Self Healing

Eating & Drinking

Children & Teens

Health & Hygiene

 

Site Home » Family & Home » Gardens & Horticulture
 

History Of The Apricot Fruit Prunus Armeniaca L. And Flowering Apricot Trees Prunus Mume

 
Apricots originated on the Russian-Chinese border in about 3000 BC and were imported along with peach seed into Europe through the 'Silk Road' that extended camelback trading to the Mideast. The fruit grows as an escaped naturalized plant along modern roadsides in Turkey and Armenia today in abundant numbers. Apricots were known in ancient Greece in 60 BC and later introduced into the Roman Empire. The apricot trees are believed to have arrived in the early American colonies in seed form for growing into fruit trees by the French explorers of the 1700's in Gulf regions and in the Eastern United States and at California monasteries by Spanish explorers and missionaries.

The apricot, Prunus armeniaca L., has a distinctive taste and no other fruit has a flavor to match it. Fresh apricots picked directly from the trees are delicious, if a person is fortunate enough to live close to an apricot tree orchard. Canners of the apricot fruit have supplied national markets reliably with tasty tree-ripened apricots. The most important market for apricot fruit developed from the exceptional quality, when the aromatic apricot is dried.

The apricot tree is beautiful in the landscape and can grow to a large size and to a great age, as the massive root system extends in giant growth explosions each year, growing further from the trunk. The apricot tree is very healthy and vigorous and appears to be resistant to most disease and insect problems, as it produces more and more substantial crops of fruit each year as the tree matures. The apricot tree can be grown in extensive areas of the Eastern and Central United States and were well northward; however, the cold hardiness of the tree itself is verifiable, but early frosts can damage the fruit.

Eating the pits of apricots has become a controversial topic in national health debates and law enforcement. Various groups have promoted an extract, laetrile, of almond pits as being a cancer cure; however, a number of people have died from the deadly poison, cyanide, including the famous actor Steve McQueen. The American Cancer Society states that the cure won't work, and the selling of these substances has been declared illegal, and some of the advocates were arrested and jailed. Other promoters of these products have fled to Mexico to promote the toxins there by mailorder and personal appointments.

Apricot trees normally are reduced in height to 12 feet by pruning, but the trees can grow to 45 feet at maturity. The apricot trees are best known as fruit producing trees, but a recent national market for flowering trees, Prunus mume, has rapidly developed, because of the abundant white, pink, or red flowers that can appear as early as the winter in some in some areas of the United States. The trees should be planted for growing, 20 to 25 feet apart, further apart than peach trees.

A number of flowering apricot trees, Prunus mume, are available commercially, the 'Matsubara Red' that blooms in late winter with double dark-red apricot flowers; 'Peggy Clarke' early rose red flowering in spring; 'Rosemary Clarke,' flowering white in early spring and Weeping Apricot 'W.B. Clarke' pink flowering in January.

The fruit of the apricot is round with a prominent rib on the side, varying in color from yellow to orange, and a reddish random overlay. The pulp is usually yellow, but some apricot cultivars may be white. A large grafted apricot tree may bear a few fruits the first year, but most trees begin to bear when two years old. Some orchadists thin out the apricot fruits to every six inches to increase the individual fruit size, and harvesting mature apricot trees, begins in May and concludes in July.

The apricot fruit has a short shelf-life in grocery stores of 1 to 2 weeks, and the healthy benefits of apricots are many'from Vitamin A, Vitamin B1, Vitamin B2, Vitamin C, Niacin, to the minerals Phosphorus, Potassium, Calcium, and Iron. The most important cultivars of apricots are Blenheim (Royal), Tilton, Perfection, Moorpark, and Early Golden. California grows 94% of the United States apricots and Turkey grows 21% of the world commercial supply.

Luther Burbank, the famous botanist and plant hybridizer wrote in his book Fruit Improvement in 121 a chapter that discussed the hybridization of plumcot, a cross between the apricot Prunus armeniaca and the Plum Prunus.

Several hybrids resulted from these crosses that contained the blending of the general characteristics of both fruits. Some hybrids offspring had characteristics directed more toward the apricot fruit, and other hybrids were inclined toward the plum parent. Several 'plumcots' have been made available to the backyard gardener market that demonstrate great cold hardiness, juiciness, and a rich, sweet flavor.

Recent hybrids of apricots have appread, the 'aprium' that is 75% apricot and 25% plum; the 'pluot' that is 75% plum and 25% apricot, and the 'plumcot' that is 50% of each parent.

Author: Pat Malcolm
 
Author Bio:

Patrick A. Malcolm, owner of TyTy Nursery, has an M.S. degree in Biochemistry and has owned and operated TyTy Nursery for over three decades.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
German Shepherd Rescue
 
Keeping Houseplants Alive During Summer Vacation Droughts
 
New York State Flower
 
Expectations in Child Rearing - Your Children Will Acheive to the Level That You Expect Them To
 
Spring Cleaning Series: Skip the Lemons, Let Go of Losing (Part 2)
 
How To Find Parts For Lawn Mowers
 
Learn How to Fix Your Dog's Chewing Problem
 
Stake Your Ground with a Tailgating Flagpole
 
Campaign Helps Uninsured Kids Get Health Care Coverage Millions Of Children Eligible For Low-Cost Or Free Coverage
 
A Review of Martha Stewart
 
 
 
 
 

A Patio Heater Can Liven Up Those Winter Days

Patio heaters may not be on the list of things to buy if you live in warm weather regions of the cou ... - Terry Edwards
 

Exteriors Make Your Great Outdoors Greater

Keeping wood properly protected is a growing challenge, especially as homeowners have made it a top ... - Stacey Moore
 

Decorating Your Tiki Bar

Learn how to create your own tiki bar for indoor or outdoor fun. - Lee Dobbins
 
 

How to Make Paper Mache Christmas Dishes

Make a paper mache dish or plate for sweets or trinkets for some one this Christmas. There are lots ... - Suie Roberts
 

Everyone Gives Advice to the New Mom

Being a new mom can be tough- and it can be even tougher with the barrage of conflicting information ... - Heather Owens
 
 
   Site Home >> Privacy >> Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2008 www.articledblogs.com