Persian Bearss Limes thrive in the ground in zones 9–11 and in containers anywhere, moved indoors before the first frost in colder regions. They're a touch more cold-tender than lemons, so a little planning keeps them productive for years.
Planting
- Choose full sun. Give the tree at least 6–8 hours of direct sunlight. Indoors, place it at a south- or west-facing window or under a grow light to keep flowering strong.
- Use well-draining, slightly acidic soil. In the ground, work compost into heavy or clay soil. In a pot, choose a quality citrus or cactus mix in a container with plenty of drainage holes — limes will not tolerate standing water.
- Set it at the right depth. Dig a hole as deep as the root ball and twice as wide. Position the plant so the top of the root ball sits slightly above grade; never bury the trunk or graft union.
- Free the roots and backfill. Gently loosen any circling roots, refill with soil, and firm it down to remove air pockets.
- Water in and mulch. Soak thoroughly, then lay a 2–3 inch ring of mulch, kept a few inches clear of the trunk.
Care & maintenance
- Water: Keep soil evenly moist but never soggy. Water deeply when the top inch or two dries out — roughly weekly in the ground, and every few days for containers during hot weather, when limes drink heavily.
- Feed: Apply a citrus fertilizer with micronutrients (nitrogen plus iron, zinc, and manganese) every 4–6 weeks from spring through summer; taper off in fall and winter.
- Light & temperature: Bearss limes are among the more cold-sensitive citrus and are damaged below about 30–32°F. In cool zones, bring containers indoors before frost and give them the brightest spot you have.
- Prune: Lightly shape in late winter to early spring, removing dead, crossing, or inward branches and any suckers below the graft. The near-thornless wood makes this easy.
- Pollinate: Trees are self-fertile and largely self-pollinating; outdoors, bees assist. Fruit sets without cross-pollination, which is part of why it stays seedless.
- Watch for pests: Check regularly for aphids, scale, citrus leaf miner, and spider mites, and treat early with horticultural oil or insecticidal soap.
- Harvest: Limes are picked green, while still firm and glossy — that's when the juice is most abundant and aromatic. Left on the tree they eventually yellow and soften, sweetening slightly but losing their classic tartness, so harvest before that point.