Leo in N E Illinois
The Professor
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- USDA Zone
- 5b
I have grown pomegranate, treating it as a tender tropical, for near 20 years never allowing it to receive a frost. Indoors, under lights with my orchids. It grew fine, reasonable vigor all year round.
Then I switched, left it outside to receive several frosts and freezes to maybe +27F or -4C. Then into an unheated, above freezing well house for 3 months, 32F to 40F or 0C to +4C. It always broke dormancy 6 weeks early, in late Feb or early March, our last frost date is in May. Growth in spring was more "explosive" like a vigorous maple. But because it was indoors for the first month, much of new growth suffered from low light intensity. Nothing beats full sun outdoors. So in the end, benefits of one method over the other are not real significant.
Lost the tree when it was forgotten and left out thru 10 F or -12 C and pot froze solid. Roots didn't survive. Branches tried to grow in spring, but quickly wilted and dried. Sure sign roots had died.
Then I switched, left it outside to receive several frosts and freezes to maybe +27F or -4C. Then into an unheated, above freezing well house for 3 months, 32F to 40F or 0C to +4C. It always broke dormancy 6 weeks early, in late Feb or early March, our last frost date is in May. Growth in spring was more "explosive" like a vigorous maple. But because it was indoors for the first month, much of new growth suffered from low light intensity. Nothing beats full sun outdoors. So in the end, benefits of one method over the other are not real significant.
Lost the tree when it was forgotten and left out thru 10 F or -12 C and pot froze solid. Roots didn't survive. Branches tried to grow in spring, but quickly wilted and dried. Sure sign roots had died.