Atwood navel orange
A California Washington-type navel selection chosen for size and early production; field behavior tracks the navel class.
Across the consideration criteria
How it grows
- Cold hardiness
- 26°F
- Ripening
- Early-season
- Vigor
- Moderate-Vigorous
- Disease tolerance
- Moderate
- Drainage need
- Well
- Soil pH
- 6–7.5
- Graft requirement
- Graft Required
- US availability
- Available
Considerations
Canopy killed at about 26°F.
Needs high heat to colour and sweeten.
Early-season fruit (Nov-Jan).
moderate-vigorous
Prefers a pH band of 6–7.5.
These are intrinsic to the citrus. On a real property, Folia scores each against your site; here they're shown on their own.
Grows alike
similar to growWashington navel orange
ripens in the same window · wants the same heat to ripen
Fukumoto navel orange
ripens in the same window · wants the same heat to ripen
Newhall navel orange
ripens in the same window · wants the same heat to ripen
Bahianinha (Bahia) navel orange
ripens in the same window · wants the same heat to ripen
Hamlin orange
ripens in the same window · wants the same heat to ripen
Parson Brown orange
ripens in the same window · wants the same heat to ripen
Climate-adapted alternatives
more resilient picksWashington navel orange
similar cold hardiness · similar heat requirement
Fukumoto navel orange
similar cold hardiness · similar heat requirement
Newhall navel orange
similar cold hardiness · similar heat requirement
Bahianinha (Bahia) navel orange
similar cold hardiness · similar heat requirement
Hamlin orange
similar cold hardiness · similar heat requirement
Parson Brown orange
similar cold hardiness · similar heat requirement
Could Atwood navel orange grow on your land?
See how Atwood navel orange scores against your specific property, with local precedent, climate, and the tradeoffs for your ground.
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