



Vielen Dank an alle, die auf meinen letzten Beitrag geantwortet haben. Ich hatte nicht erwartet, dass er so viel Aufmerksamkeit erhält.
Jetzt weiß ich, dass die Pflanze in der Mitte kein Basilikum ist und die Pflanzen um sie herum definitiv Gras und anderes Unkraut sind. Obwohl es sich bei der Pflanze nicht um eine Basilikumpflanze handelt, hänge ich immer noch daran fest, da ich sie jetzt seit fast zwei Monaten gieße und ich möchte, dass sie weiter wächst.
Ich bin mir aber nicht sicher, um welche Pflanze es sich handelt.
Ich habe in den Kommentaren zu meinem letzten Beitrag nachgeschaut und die Leute haben angedeutet, dass es sich um einen Zitronenbaum handeln könnte. Wenn es also so ist, bin ich irgendwie begeistert. Vom Gießen bis zum Beobachten, wie es wächst.
Ich denke, es ist ein Zitronenbaum, aber wenn jemand Vorschläge hat, was das ist oder wie man ihn besser pflegt, bin ich ganz offen
Von: Known_Quality_6885
25 Comments
Looks like some kind of citrus
Looks very citrus-y.
Sure looks like citrus. If you can spare one leaf from the plant some time try crushing and smelling it. Should be unmistakable citrus smell.
I have a lemon tree that big that looks exactly the same
Agreed with people that were here first, looks very similar to a lemon tree
Look at the leaves against a light. Citrus has small white spots (oil).
Citrus for sure – I’ve a lemon that’s been going for years, and a lime that’s not done great. The structure is identical – could never tell them apart until fruit set
Where did you find the plant? That can help with ID. It is definitely citrus. Most commercially available citrus trees are grafted, meaning the bottom(root stock) and the top(scion) are from 2 different plants.
The hearty rootstock can survive and thrive with our native nematodes, and the top piece comes from a desirable citrus(Meyer lemon, Persian lime…etc)
That being said, if the plant you’re growing doesn’t produce the citrus that you want, you can always graft onto it. Most of the time, the easiest way to tell is the thorns. Often times rootstock citrus has wicked thorns. Where I live they use mandeville or bitter orange for the rootstock and then graft one or more good citrus on top. You can have a lime, lemon, orange, and grapefruit all on one tree. I prefer to keep the oranges and grapefruits on one tree, 2-3 kinds of lemon on another, and multiple limes on the third.
Lime plant?
Rub the leaves and smell them. It looks like my orange tree
That’s a citrus plant for sure
Looks like my temperamental dwarf lemon tree
That’s a lemon bro!
That’s a Calamondin citrus
It’s a citrus, no doubt there. You probably won’t be able to tell the variety until it bear fruits.
It’s a lemon tree sapling
No not basil
I was also going to say it looks like some kind of citrus I have grown them from seed
Either a citrus plant, or bay leaf.
Lemon
How do you get a citrus plant to flower? I’ve had one for 7 years and it had not flowered once.
Citrus
Not basil
Rub the leaf, it might give off a scent.
Citrus of some sort…no basil unfortunately