Citrus Hybrid, Fingered Citron, Buddha's Hand

Citrusmedica var. sarcodactylus

Family
Rutaceae (roo-TAY-see-ee)
Genus
Citrus (SIT-rus)
Synonym
Other Details
Water Requirements
Foliage Color
Where to Grow
Grow outdoors year-round in hardiness zone
Bloom Characteristics
Bloom Size
Other details
Soil pH requirements
Patent Information
Propagation Methods
Seed Collecting
Regional

This plant is said to grow outdoors in the following regions:

Gaylesville, Alabama

Albany, California

Clovis, California

East Palo Alto, California

El Cajon, California

El Sobrante, California

Ojai, California

San Jose, California

Boca Raton, Florida

Lady Lake, Florida

Stuart, Florida

Venice, Florida

Wellborn, Florida

Hulbert, Oklahoma

North Charleston, South Carolina

Houston, Texas(2 reports)

La Porte, Texas

Shepherd, Texas

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Gardener's Notes:

9
positives
1
neutral
0
negative
Sort By:
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R
(Zone 1) | September 2012 | positive

Buddha's Hand Citrus Fruit is also known as Bushukan or Fingered Citron. It originated from India and China.
It is an ornamental ...Read More

G
| March 2011 | positive

I'd often seen this as an ornamental plant, but discovered its culinary value when I was served some fresh cheese in a restaurant with th...Read More

R
R
Puyallup, WA (Zone 8b) | December 2008 | positive

I was surprised to see this guy survive the snow we had last week. A few leaves got a little brown, but otherwise mine still looks ok!!

M
Houston, TX (Zone 10a) | April 2007 | positive

It looks beautiful, I have just gotten ahold of a young plant about a foot tall. It is outside, hopefully it will like it there.

L
L
North Charleston, SC | October 2006 | positive

Buddha's hand does not normally produce seed. If by chance you find one I would not think it would come true to type.

J
| April 2006 | positive

I have one of these citrons in a pot, after repotting it has just started to settle down, and throw out a flush of leaves. The picture I...Read More

M
Orlando, FL | June 2004 | positive

That despite the fact that the plant I had was the most bug-prone citrus ever. It has since kicked the bucket.

Why my expe...Read More

M
El Cajon, CA (Zone 10a) | April 2004 | positive

We bought three plants for our garden E of San Diego, one little tree died and one is struggling - snail attacks seem to be the problem ...Read More

I
Keizer, OR (Zone 8b) | September 2003 | positive

This plant's a natural crowd pleaser. People spot the fruit from as far away as they can see it and gravitate to it to get a better look....Read More

B
San Francisco, CA | November 2002 | neutral

I really like the way this fruit looks,like an odd shaped lemon. The fruit is mostly rind, but is candied in Asian cuisine.

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