SKU: 91001222223
miniature orange tree calamondin

miniature orange tree calamondin Citrus × microcarpa

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Description

miniature orange tree calamondin Citrus × microcarpaCitrus microcarpa Calamondin Citrus microcarpa, commonly known as calamondin or calamansi, is a compact evergreen citrus with glossy foliage, scented flowers and small orange fruit. Its branching crown stays manageable in a pot, while mature plants can carry flowers, green fruit and ripe fruit during the same season when light and watering remain steady. The fruits are small, round and aromatic, with a thin orange peel and sharp acidic juice.

Citrus × microcarpa – Calamondin

Citrus × microcarpa, commonly known as calamondin or calamansi, is a compact evergreen citrus with glossy foliage, scented flowers and small orange fruit. Its branching crown stays manageable in a pot, while mature plants can carry flowers, green fruit and ripe fruit during the same season when light and watering remain steady.

The fruits are small, round and aromatic, with a thin orange peel and sharp acidic juice. Calamondin is both an ornamental potted tree and a culinary acid citrus, especially for seasoning, drinks, marinades and preserves when the plant has been grown and treated as an edible crop.

Calamondin orange fruit and dense crown

  • Growth habit: Compact evergreen citrus with glossy leaves and a naturally branching crown.
  • Flowers: White scented flowers followed by small round orange fruit.
  • Fruit: Sharp acidic juice and aromatic peel, with calamondin and calamansi both used as common names.
  • Fruit profile: Small orange fruit with sour aromatic pulp and thin peel.
  • Pot habit: Compact citrus for strong light, seasonal warmth and protected wintering above about 13°C.

Small orange fruit and dense branching

Citrus × microcarpa is an accepted hybrid citrus in the Rutaceae family involving kumquat and mandarin ancestry, commonly linked with Citrus japonica and Citrus reticulata. Older names include × Citrofortunella microcarpa, × Citrofortunella mitis and Citrus × mitis.

The plant forms slender woody shoots, oval glossy leaves and starry white flowers. Fruit ripens from green to orange and usually stays much smaller than a mandarin. The pulp is sour, so the fruit is mainly used for juice and flavour.

Calamondin container routine

  • Light: Give very bright light with direct sun where possible. Strong light improves flowering and fruiting.
  • Water: Water deeply once the upper part of the substrate has dried. Keep moisture more even during warm active growth, then water more carefully in winter.
  • Substrate: Use a free-draining citrus substrate with mineral particles. Calamondin roots need both moisture and air, especially in a container.
  • Wintering: Keep bright and protected above about 13°C. Mild winter temperatures need enough light and measured watering.
  • Feeding: Use citrus fertiliser from spring into autumn. Regular nutrition keeps foliage green and improves flower and fruit formation in a long-term pot.
  • Dry air: Heated dry air can increase spider mite pressure and leaf drop. A modest humidity lift plus regular foliage checks lowers winter pest pressure.
  • Flowering under cover: Flowers are self-fertile. Indoors, gently brushing open flowers can improve fruit set where insect activity is low.
  • Repotting: Repot when the pot is well rooted, moving up by one modest pot size. Oversized pots stay wet too long around citrus roots.
  • Pruning: Prune lightly after fruiting or before strong spring growth. Remove shoots from below the graft point if they appear.

Calamondin foliage and crop checks

  • Leaf drop after moving: Check light, draughts, dry air and watering changes. Calamondin reacts quickly when moved from bright outdoor conditions into warmer, darker winter conditions.
  • Yellowing foliage: Inspect the rootball first. Cold wet substrate can damage roots, while pale new growth can point to nutrient shortage in an exhausted mix.
  • Flower drop: Low light, dry air, heat stress or irregular watering can interrupt fruit set. Stabilise the growing conditions before increasing fertiliser.
  • Small or shedding fruit: Young plants may reduce part of their crop naturally. Keep watering even and avoid swings between dry and saturated substrate.
  • Sticky stems or leaves: Look along stems and leaf backs. Remove scale, aphids or mealybug early because honeydew builds quickly on glossy citrus foliage.

Calamondin fruit peel, pets and name

Calamondin peel, leaves and stems contain aromatic oils and psoralens. Clear dropped fruit, loose leaves and cut stems where pets can reach them, and handle small thorns carefully during pruning or repotting.

The generic name Citrus is tied to Latin citron naming and the wider group of aromatic citrus plants. The hybrid sign in Citrus × microcarpa reflects its hybrid origin, while microcarpa means small-fruited. Calamansi is widely used in the Philippines for the fruit and juice.

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DL
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Permission to Help My Child Find Joy
Format: Hardcover
As a parent starting the college search process, I've really come to appreciate Jeff's insights in his previous books, podcast and newsletter. So pleased to finally have this book at my disposal, and less than a month in, it's already dog-eared and marked up! Like most parents out there, I'm fighting my own internal inertia to align my child's accomplishments against the "metrics" (real or imagined) of admission, and gravitating towards the big names. If you are in that stage, I'll say from personal experience that now is a great time to pick up this book. It's a quick read (for someone who's not a "reader"), and it plants the right questions and data in your head to open your perspective. Its funny, every good parent I know just wants their kid to be happy, to find their joy in life. When it comes down to it, our only equating of big name to their happiness comes a derivation that success brings happiness, and big school brings success. As Jeff suggests, this book doesn't say DON'T seek the big name... It just gives permission to look more broadly, that the same success, and perhaps even greater happiness, can be found elsewhere. Now we just need need to make sure our kids see that too, and they are empowered to seek their joy with our full support. There is still data in here that confirms name schools do convey certain advantages. Whether those advantages align with a child's success and happiness is the question we can chase in this process. I, for one, really appreciate Jeff's efforts to make the case for the broader search and taking the time to do it with excellent, fresh analysis of the data in hand. Maybe this book and others generate the momentum to continuing these unique data streams to break the US News/Naviance overload of the process. Good luck to everyone in a similar boat, and I hope you find this as useful a reference as I did.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 22, 2025
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Udo F
Draper, US
★★★★★ 4
Good Book!
Format: Hardcover
Pretty insightful book! I don't read college books too often but Selingo has very very good ideas that can easily transfer to college.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 14, 2026
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Lauren Feltner
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
Great read to start on the college search journey
Format: Hardcover
Highly recommend for high school parents and students!
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Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2026
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Melanie R.
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 5
Good advice
Format: Hardcover
Good advice for my younger relatives
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Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2026
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Pirate Radio
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
Works well
Format: Hardcover
I learned a lot about current college selection process. I still recommend urging your kids to apply for stretch colleges. Don't limit to safe schools. But this book helped me understand the nature of current college student selection process, i feel less crazy re contradictory results.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2026

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