Hamlin orange
An early, cold-tolerant-for-an-orange Florida juice variety; productive but pale-juiced, so it is a processing workhorse, not a fresh-market star.
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 (Oct-Dec).
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
Atwood 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
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
Atwood 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
Parson Brown orange
similar cold hardiness · similar heat requirement
Could Hamlin orange grow on your land?
See how Hamlin orange scores against your specific property, with local precedent, climate, and the tradeoffs for your ground.
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