Growing your own fruit can be a fulfilling experience and caring for a fruit tree doesn’t need to be difficult. While many trees need years of growth from seed before generating, there are many choices for getting fruit quicker. You could buy a grafted tree that will make fruit in the 1st year or buy a mature tree that is now producing. Take into consideration the schedule for ripe fruit and plant a tree that will make fruit all year long.
Fruit Trees Are Very Common Throughout Florida
Grapefruit

Grapefruit Trees
Grapefruit is a subtropical citrus tree well-known for being a sour, semi-sweet and bitter fruit.
Fig
The fig tree has been around since ancient times and grows wild in sunny, dry areas.
Banana
The banana is an edible fruit made by numerous types of herbaceous flowering plants in the genus Musa. In some areas, bananas used for cooking may be called plantains, in contrast to dessert bananas. The fruit varies in color, firmness, and size.
Pomegranate
The pomegranate is a fruit-bearing deciduous tree. Whether it’s the seeds or juice, pomegranates are used in cooking, juice blends, baking, meal garnishes, alcoholic beverages, smoothies, wine, and cocktails.
Lemon
The lemon is a species of little evergreen tree in the flowering plant family. This fruit is used for culinary and non-culinary purposes around the globe. Mainly known for its juice, it has both culinary and cleaning uses.
Lime
Lime is a citrus fruit which is round and green. Limes are a good source of vitamin C and are frequently used to accent the flavors of beverages and dishes.

Avocado Tree
Avacado
Avocados must be mature to ripen correctly. Avocados that drop off the tree ripen on the ground. Usually, the fruit is picked once it gets to maturity.
Papaya
The papaya is a sparsely branched, little tree with spirally arranged leaves coming from the top of the trunk.
Mango
Mangoes are juicy stone fruits from several species of tropical trees. They are cultivated mainly for their edible fruit. The majority of these species are seen in nature as wild mangoes.
For more information on Florida fruit trees, get in touch with a Tampa arborist.