Detailed steps of kiwifruit planting:
1. Kiwifruit plants can grow for 50 years. You can grow these plants, and you like to grow grapes with good support. Although it is often said that kiwifruit, oranges, peaches and almonds grow well, this is not entirely true, because these trees will receive more sunlight and less fertile soil and still grow well.
2. The leaves, buds and flowers of kiwifruit are covered with delicate reddish-brown hair. In order to set the fruit correctly, kiwifruit needs some cold in winter. Some varieties can sleep when the temperature drops 10' F in winter, but early frost will destroy the fruit. Kiwifruit will shed its leaves at 32 degrees Fahrenheit, which takes 400 hours of dormancy, or 40 days, 40 degrees Fahrenheit (4.44 degrees Celsius) to bear fruit.
3. Kiwifruit needs to absorb enough sunlight, or it should be planted in hot climate under some shady conditions. Kiwi is not the desert soil. It needs moist and well-drained fertile soil. Heavy clay is not good. But kiwifruit will rot into peach trees when it is wet-treated. The soil should be slightly acidic. Plants also need good air circulation, but strong winds should be avoided. Because the roots of these plants are sensitive to chemical fertilizer burns, compound fertilizer should be lightly applied in early spring and early summer for various purposes (10- 10- 10).
4. Pruning is reduced by about 1/3, and pruning is carried out in winter when plants are dormant.
Although kiwifruit is considered to be the best of all edible fruits produced by kiwifruit. However, Actinidia arguta and Actinidia arguta are colder and richer (to 25' F). Actinidia arguta has a smooth cherry-sized fruit. Actinidia arguta's fruit is smaller, but pink and white decorations often splash on the leaves to grow.