![]() ![]() McSwain Education Center, JC Raulston Arboretum at NC State University, 4415 Beryl Road, Raleigh, North Carolina, and online. Cancellation Program cancellations can be made up to two weeks before the program's start date. ![]() Registration is limited to 24 people and is considered complete when payment is received. Please register online using our registration e-store. ![]() Registration Advance registration is required. Cost $25.00 for members, $30.00 for nonmembers. in horticulture and design from NC State University. He owns an award-winning garden design/plant/build business and has a B.S. He's growing two varieties of delicious lemons in his backyard that have survived 11 degree winters without protection. His oldest potted dwarf citrus tree is three decades old and he picked Clementines in Spain while Jack-Kerouacing around Europe when he was twenty. Class includes a slideshow, handout of resources, and plenty of Q&A time.įrank Hyman lives in Durham and wrote the "Cutting Edge Crops" column for Hobby Farm magazine. How would you like to grow the most valuable lemon in your own back yard without protection (it's more valuable than Meyer lemon)? How would you like to harvest home grown Clementines, kumquats, and yes, even Meyer lemons and others in winter inside your own home? Not to mention the pleasure of fragrant flowers, fragrant leaves, and evergreens to decorate for Christmas. Frank Hyman and a number of others have been growing citrus trees in the Triangle both in-ground or in pots for years. You don't have to live on the Gulf Coast (or the Left Coast) to grow delicious citrus. Introduction to Growing Citrus in North Carolina Full-Waitlist Started ![]()
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