Satsuma Silverhill

The Satsuma Silverhill is a highly valued and sweet mandarin variety, known for its easy-to-peel, smooth, bright orange skin and seedless, juicy flesh. This medium-sized fruit offers a rich, sweet flavour with a hint of tang, making it perfect for fresh eating, juicing, and adding a burst of citrusy goodness to desserts and salads. The Silverhill Satsuma tree is a reliable and early-season producer, offering a generous harvest from early winter, providing fresh, vitamin-rich mandarins when other citrus varieties are yet to ripen. It thrives in full sun and well-drained soil, making it an excellent choice for home gardeners looking for a productive and low-maintenance citrus tree. Its compact size makes it ideal for small gardens, patios, and container growing, ensuring you can enjoy the taste of fresh, homegrown mandarins even in limited spaces.

SATSUMA SILVERHILL MANDARIN TREE FEATURES

  • Fruit: Medium-sized with smooth, easy-to-peel bright orange skin and sweet, seedless flesh
  • Height: 2-3 metres when mature
  • Growing Habits: Compact and bushy, self-fertile, thrives in full sun, prefers well-drained soil, suitable for pots or small garden spaces.

See similar: Citrus Trees | Mandarins

Product is out of stock
$35.00
Visit Us

Explore our complete range in person

Notify me when Satsuma Silverhill - 4 litre pot becomes available.

Customer Reviews

Be the first to write a review
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)

As recommended by the Swiss Rose Garden Nursery.

  1. Dig a hole 60cm wide and 60cm deep. If the topsoil is usable, separate it from the sand as it can be re-used in the hole. When planting roses in an existing rose bed or where roses have been previously grown during the last 5 years, the soil must be replaced.
  2. Mix together a mixture that contains 2 parts topsoil, 2 parts compost, 1 part manure or buy a Soil Improver, Landscaping or Rose Soil mix from a Landscape supply place. About 100 litres per planting hole is recommended.
  3. A layer of manure can be placed at the bottom of the hole and then the hole filled with the above soil mix.
  4. Place one handful of slow-release fertilizer at 20cm depth from the top where the roots of the newly planted rose will be situated.
  5. Soak the soil thoroughly and lightly compact.
  6. Now plant the rose in this mix with the surface of the plant even with the surface of the prepared area, e.g., the graft union should be about 5 to 10 cm above soil level.
  7. Water every day for the first six months from October onwards, up to 10 litres per day during warm weather is recommended for strong deep root development.
  8. Plant roses 1m to 1.2m apart.

Enjoy the beautiful roses!