AZZenny
Registered User
For the past few years I've been trying to grow caper bushes here, to see how they'd do as a Zone 9 ornamental. They are being grown as a crop in Texas and California, so why not?
I've collected caper seeds from all over, with one or two more varieties to go, and have been nurturing 4 or 5 plants that are unknown commercial varieties from Italy, Australia, Bosnia and Turkey. They are doing amazingly well -- the first 2 years are touchy, and I doubt they'd transplant well once mature, but they LOVE the heat, need very little water, and are attractive plants with pretty blossoms.
I meet the Caper Lady
also...Blue and very rare Capers
Now that I have several 3-4 year old plants, I'm picking lots of caper buds and salt-curing them, so we'll see how that works. I also have more fresh caper seeds than I have any idea what to do with, since my remaining garden space is going to go to other, wild varieties.
Anybody want some caper seeds to try growing them? Just plant them in a full-sun area that you can water maybe 1 x week in summer, let them overwinter, and some should sprout in spring. You'll need to protect the seeds and sprouts from birds with a wire mesh or net the first year, but after they get a few inches tall in year 2, they are peppery enough that birds leave them alone. I have some growing through the fence and rabbits and javelina have left them alone, too.
I've collected caper seeds from all over, with one or two more varieties to go, and have been nurturing 4 or 5 plants that are unknown commercial varieties from Italy, Australia, Bosnia and Turkey. They are doing amazingly well -- the first 2 years are touchy, and I doubt they'd transplant well once mature, but they LOVE the heat, need very little water, and are attractive plants with pretty blossoms.
I meet the Caper Lady
also...Blue and very rare Capers
Now that I have several 3-4 year old plants, I'm picking lots of caper buds and salt-curing them, so we'll see how that works. I also have more fresh caper seeds than I have any idea what to do with, since my remaining garden space is going to go to other, wild varieties.
Anybody want some caper seeds to try growing them? Just plant them in a full-sun area that you can water maybe 1 x week in summer, let them overwinter, and some should sprout in spring. You'll need to protect the seeds and sprouts from birds with a wire mesh or net the first year, but after they get a few inches tall in year 2, they are peppery enough that birds leave them alone. I have some growing through the fence and rabbits and javelina have left them alone, too.
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