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| Posted: Thu Oct 09, 2008 12:42 am    Post subject: Swamp Lemon |   | 
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Not sure if this should be listed here or roostock.
Anyway... Terry sent me some fruit with the below story attached. The 
fruit is the size of large Trifoliata fruit. Same look & texture. 
The thing is these fruit don't have the stink of standard Trifoliata. 
Too late to take photos, I will get some tomorrow, clean the seed and 
let you know what I find.
 
 
    | Quote: |     | Swamp Lemon Story 
 
 I finally got up with the guy who has the Swamp Lemon.  What a neat 
old guy.  He reminded me of my grandfather.  Here's what he told me so 
far.
 That he was 14 when he was hunting on the Livingston Creek in Delco,
 NC.   He saw the swamp lemon and asked he's older hunting companion 
about it.  His friend said that the Swamp Lemons had grown wild there on
 Livingston creek for as long as he could remember.  This guy Charley 
said that as that was 60 years ago and adding his friend’s age would 
make it about 125 years that these lemons were growing wild there.
 I think the 60 years is reliable. I'm not as sure of his old friends
 extra 45years.  So, this Swamp Lemon has been growing there for 60 to 
125 years.
 He said that most people who live in that areas have these lemon 
trees growing in their yard by digging them up from this creek.  But as 
far as I know the Swamp Lemon trees are only growing wild along the west
 side of Rte. 74 where it crosses the Livingston Creek.
 So I'm thinking that some one brought a fruit there from FL about 60
 to 125 ears ago. The trifoliate may have been cross-pollinated from an 
orange.  But the fruit doesn’t look much different than trifoliate.
 I am surprised that in 60 to 125 years that all of the Cape Fear 
river isn't covered with Swamp Lemons because Livingston Creek flows 
into the Cape Fear River.  The Lemon site is only about 30 miles from 
Wilmington.   Maybe the brackish water helped.
 After a lot of effort I obtained some fruit and seedlings and some cuttings.
 Now here’s the thing.  The fruits flesh has no trifoliate taste or 
smell.  None at all.  The peeling has a slight off smell and a gummy 
nature to it.  It doesn’t taste good or bad it’s kind of bland.  The 
taste is closer to an orange than a lemon but definitely citrus.  I 
don’t know if a regular Trifoliate has a lemon or orange taste.  All I 
remember of the one I tried to taste was the terrible smell that was 
nauseating.    But, unlike the usual trifoliate you can eat it.  I was 
told that some have made lemonade with it.  So, I tried it.  On a scale 
of 1 to 10 I’d give it a 5.     If you live in a zone 9 or 10 it 
wouldn’t impress you.  If you live in a zone 6 or 7 and wanted to say 
you drank a Trifoliate lemonade it wasn’t bad.
 My question is,” If a Swamp Lemon used this to re-make some of the 
early trifoliate crosses do you think I would be ahead of the game taste
 wise?   This doesn’t seem to be a soil generated taste difference.  The
 Swamp Lemon that I got is at the least third generation from the 
original tree and is 10 to 15 miles from the original tree.
 
 
 
 The flesh seems more yellow than Poncirus and the
 juice has an agreeable sour taste.   There were Poncirus oils in the 
skin though, and the fruit size (external appearance) was more similar 
to Poncirus than citrange.
 
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