Try Healthy Living This Summer:
Pick the Right Puppy for the Family
At Last...Guilt-Free Comfort Foods
The Amazing Effects of a Neighborhood Garden
Great Time Get-Together
Accessibility Gardening
Beneficial Biking
On The Road Car Comforts For Family
How to Stay Cool in Summer Heat
Grow A Beanpole Tepee For Your Kids
Gone Fishing: A Relaxing Hobby Worth Catching
Establish a Place Just for Leisure
Growing Trend: Food-Sharing Clubs
Sun Shelters Offer the Best of Both Worlds
Summer Living: Asleep Under The Stars
A Garden Designed for First-Time Gardeners
Healthy Living: Kid-Friendly Lawns
Healthy Living: Begin With Breakfast
Healthy Living: Let's Dance
Healthy Living: Find Your Favorite Scent
Healthy Living: Art Smart
Sipping Summer
Summer Living: Casual Make-Ahead Food for the Beach
Farm-Fresh Produce from the Farmer's Market
Summer Living: Host a Block Party
Summer Living: Icy Treats
Screensaver: Beach Scenes
Surefire Ways to Beat the Summer Heat
Family Project: A Weekend Garden Makeover
Host a Progressive Garden Party
Good-For-You Grilling
Jazz up a Plant Stand From a Flea Market
 



Cottage Living

Seed Starting
It's easier than you think to grow your own herbs and vegetables.


 
Five Easy Fruits to Grow in Your Backyard
For a delicious taste of the season, you can't beat homegrown fruit. Here are our top picks for beginners.
By Steve Bender / Photography by Van Chaplin

There are several good reasons to grow fruit yourself. First, store-bought fruits are often picked, shipped, and sold before they fully ripen. Second, stores generally stock selections that look the prettiest but are not necessarily the best tasting. Finally, some fruits, such as blueberries and figs, make outstanding ornamental plants.

Apples
Given plenty of sun, apple trees grow in almost any well-drained soil and take summer drought without batting an eye. You can buy three different sizes: standard (matures at 20 to 25 feet tall and wide), semi-dwarf (10 to 20 feet), and dwarf (5 to 8 feet). Dwarf and semi-dwarf are good choices for most people; they take up less room and bear fruit at a young age.

Self-pollinating selections, such as 'Golden Delicious' and 'Grimes Golden,' will bear fruit without having another apple tree around. But most selections need cross-pollination with a different selection to bear fruit.

Figs
With their tropical-looking leaves and stout trunks, fig trees make picturesque additions to the yard. Even better, they require very little attention.

Figs are self-pollinating, so you need only one to get fruit. Most selections bear a small crop of fruit in June or July and a larger one August to October. If you live in the Upper South, grow fig trees in containers and bring them indoors for winter. In the Middle South, fig trees may die to the ground following cold winters, but will then resprout. They are fully hardy in the Lower, Coastal, and Tropical South.

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