Peaches

What could be more fun than picking a whole bowl full of peaches off
your very own tree in your backyard? 
 

Picking a whole basket of peaches
off your very own tree in your backyard!

Peaches are self fertile, meaning a single tree will produce fruit without needing another one for pollination.

yum!

sliced peaches

However, planting more than one variety with different chill hour requirements is the best way to be sure to have a crop, no matter how cold or warm our winter is.

Flavor and sweetness of your peach is determined more by how you feed your tree --- or not --- than it is by cultivar.
Ask us about our Magic Soil Formula for feeding fruit trees.


Florida peaches are much more geographically sensitive than pears, plums or even nectarines.  They simply have a narrow window of chill hour requirements: so most have an adaptability range of 50-100 miles, and really should have a "maximum chill hour rating" too ---
but there is no such organized data 😀

Bearing age trees in
7g & 15g available

see below for details

IFAS chill map

IFAS chill hours map


For all of zones 8b & 9a:

FlordaKing Peach

FlordaCrest Peach

FlordaGold Peach

FL King

is a tasty, sweet, juicy peach:  has a slight point on the end, and has a beautiful red blush on a golden yellow background.  
It is one of the largest of the low chill varieties.  Will produce the most fruit on the coldest of our winters.  Mostly clingstone.

is a prolific producing peach, with medium sized red blushed fruit 2.5-2.75" in diameter. 
Semi-clingstone.

produces an utterly delicious, large juicy peach 3" in diameter. Foliage is naturally a slightly lighter color green than the others.
Semi-freestone


Ripens late May.

Ripens early May.

Ripens early to mid- May

chill hours:  400-425

chill hours:  300-350


chill hours:  325-350


for zones 8a, 8b, 9a

for zones 8b, 9a

for zones 8b, 9a


Other peaches for lower parts of  zone 9a:
(includes south of Gainesville to north of Orlando & Tampa)

Red Baron Peach

FlordaBest Peach

FlordaBelle Peach

Red Baron peach is 3" diameter

is a large, 3" diameter,  low chill peach for all of zones 8 & 9;  late bloomer,  ripens in July --- the latest of the low chill peaches;
showy red blossoms:  click here to view;

long time favorite  in CA & TX,
Red Baron is freestone.

peach

Another 3"  diameter juicy peach developed by IFAS for North Central and Central Florida.  Beautiful yellow with strong red blushing, ripens weeks earlier than FL King or FL Gold.  Semi-freestone.

Juicy 3"  peach much like the FlordaBest, but ripens about a week earlier, third to fourth week of April.   Profusely flowers in early February.  High yielding variety.
Semi-clingstone


Ripens mid- to late-July.

Ripens late April to early May.

Ripens mid to late April

chill hours:  250

chill hours:  250

chill hours:  200

for zones 8a, 8b, 9a & 9b

for all of zone 9a

for zones 9a & 9b

Tropic Snow Peach

peaches on a tree

Tropic Snow is the only white peach available in the low chill varieties.  
Flowers are a pale pink, fruit is light yellow to white interior, with pale pink blush on light yellow skins.
Very low acid:  translates to sweeter if fed properly, i.e. w/ trace minerals.  
Mostly freestone.

Ripens mid to late April, same time as the FlordaBelle.

chill hours:  200


for zones 9a & 9b


Peaches for zones 9b & 10a:
(includes pockets around Orlando & Tampa, and even Jacksonville near the St Johns)

Florda Prince Peach

Tropic Beauty Peach

UF Sun Peach

One of the most widely planted low chill peaches.  Officially listed as a 2" peach, but we've seen 2.5-2.75" peaches in our nursery, when grafted on Nemaguard rootstocks.


Exceptionally juicy, yellow melting flesh with rich red 80% blushed skins.

Tropic Beauty is a beautiful red skinned peach with melting flesh.  Highly prolific, medium sized peach at 2-2.5"


semi-freestone

UF Sun is the lowest of the low chill peaches at 100-125 chill hours;
highly prolific, but smaller than most at 2.25-2.50";

#1 choice for South FL


Ripens early to mid-April.

Ripens early to mid- April

Ripens late March to mid-April;

chill hours:  150

chill hours:  150


chill hours:  100-150


for zones 9b-10a

for zones 9b-10a

for zones 9b & 10a


Call us to order or 
Order online below:

not all varieties available in all sizes:
please call or email to check availability before ordering
NO TEXTING!

our 4 most popular varieties:

FlordaKing Peach:  Prunus persica 'Flordaking'
FlordaGold Peach:  Prunus persica 'Flordagold'
FlordaBest Peach:  
Prunus persica 'Flordabest'
FlordaPrince Peach:  
Prunus persica 'Flordaprince'


Beginning Bearing Age in  7gal >>>  REG 7G $49  &  X-LG 7G  $69:
see specs in chart below

Want a serious orchard size tree now?
order 15gal / $99  &  X-LG 15G  $135

15G:  7'-8'+ /3.5-4.5' wide / 1.25"
super 15g: 9-11' tall / 4.5-5' wide / 1.5" trunks

4gal

1-2 yrs+ to fruit

5-5.5' tall / after trimming

  • very little branching yet
  • 3/8-1/2" trunks above the graft
  • wait at least one year b/4 allowing fruit sets to mature on this size tree

$29ea

selections limited to Florda Gold, FlordaPrince & Tropic Beauty

7gal

beginning to fruit

approx 5.5-6' tall

  • beginning to branch
  • 3/4" trunks above the graft
  • "de-leadered" i.e. properly pruned for optimal shaping

$49ea

please specify variety:
Quantity:  

no Red Barron
or UF Sun

super7gal

good fruiting age

approx 6.5-7' tall

  • nicely branching
  • 1" trunks
    above the graft

$69ea

please specify variety:
Quantity:  

no  UF Sun

15gal

heavy fruiting:
Orchard-ready trees

some have already had fruit

8'+ tall / trimmed

  • well branched
  • 1.25" trunks above the graft

$99ea

please specify variety:
Quantity:  

limited availability:
call to verify 1st:
plenty Tropic Beauty
& FL Prince


Red Barron available for Fall 2021

super 15gal

serious bearing age

8-10' tall / trimmed

  • well branched
  • 1.5" trunks above the graft

$135ea

please specify variety:
Quantity:  

limited availability:
contact us to verify 1st


A few observations:
If you live in Zone 8b, 9a or 9b:

We recommend growing 2-3 varieties of peaches minimum to accommodate the vast variance in our winters.  Milder winters will result in the Tropic Beauty bearing prolifically, while the FlordaGold or FlordaKing will thrive on much colder weather.

In severe winters,  FlordaKing is the best bet in Alachua County and further north. 

In pockets below Ocala and north of Orlando, it is crucial to consider if you are planting just north of a lake or south of a lake.  North of a lake, the 200-250 chill hour peaches like FlordaBest & Florda Belle fruit more dependably.   South of a lake, Florda Prince & Tropic Beauty will produce more, even though they are rated as 150 chill hours, and theoretically the same zone.  Check out the IFAS chill hour map above: notice how vastly different the chill hours are in the short distance from Gainesville to north Orlando!

Ask us for input if you have any doubts about what to plant:  we've watched these seasons come and go for more than a few decades in these parts.

The reason for all this winter temperature variance is this part of north and central Florida is what you might call a transition zone.  It's an area where the cold fronts push in from the the north and northwest, and roll to a stop, equally balanced by the warm fronts rolling north, primarily from the southwest.  Where those two forces collide changes with the wind faster than you can blink, and brings us 80 degree days followed by 20 degree nights in the same week at a moments notice in January and February.  
Welcome to Florida!

Understand that young trees will not do as well with the weather extremes as more established trees.  They simply need more root mass.  
You may lose a Tropic Beauty altogether if you plant it and then get very late freezes the very first year it blooms (in zone 8b-9a like Alachua County). 

On the other hand, a more established Tropic Beauty will survive well, but not have much fruit, if at all that year. But since you also planted a FlordaGold, you'll have a great crop of peaches anyhow!

Good for you!  😀