Citrus

Minneola Tangelo

Citrus × tangelo 'Minneola' · Rutaceae

Also called: Honeybell, Honeybell Tangelo, Minneola

Minneola Tangelo (Citrus × tangelo 'Minneola') is a moderate-water citrus well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun, with a moderate to fast growth rate. Expect white, fragrant blooms spring.

Minneola Tangelo (Citrus × tangelo 'Minneola') growing in Tucson
Photo: Amada44 (CC BY 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Minneola Tangelo at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun (8+ hours). Provide afternoon shade and paint/wrap trunks of young trees to prevent sunburn in Tucson.
Mature size
15-20 ft tall and wide; vigorous, rounded tree. Distinctive 'bell' shape to the fruit (necked stem end).
Growth rate
Moderate to fast
Bloom
White, fragrant, Spring (Mar-Apr).
Cold hardiness
USDA 9a-9b. Moderately frost-sensitive (mandarin/grapefruit parentage); minor damage near 28°F. Protect young trees during hard freezes.
Soil
Well-drained alkaline desert soil; break through caliche and ensure drainage at planting.
Native range
Cultivar; a tangelo (Duncan grapefruit × Dancy mandarin) developed by the USDA, released 1931.
Best used as
Edible fruit (large, juicy, sweet-tart 'Honeybell'; fresh eating, juice), Backyard fruit tree
Wildlife
Fragrant bloom attracts bees and pollinators.
Toxicity
Fruit edible/non-toxic to people. Peel oils mildly upsetting to pets.

How to grow Minneola Tangelo in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Deep soak every 7-10 days in summer, every 3-4 weeks in winter; wet soil to ~3 ft deep out to the canopy edge and allow the surface to dry between cycles. Keep the trunk dry. Consistent deep water improves fruit size and quality.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Nitrogen 3x/year (Feb, May, Aug/Sep), ~1-1.5 lb actual N/yr for a mature tree. Supplement iron/zinc/manganese chelates for desert micronutrient deficiencies; avoid late-fall nitrogen.

Pruning & care

Minimal. Remove deadwood, below-graft suckers, and crossing limbs in spring after frost. Keep canopy open enough for light; maintain low skirts to shade the trunk.

Notes

IMPORTANT: Minneola is self-incompatible (largely self-sterile) and sets a much heavier crop when cross-pollinated. Plant a compatible pollinizer nearby — Kinnow, Dancy, or Clementine mandarins work well; do NOT use Satsuma or its siblings Orlando/Seminole. Large, bell-necked, richly flavored fruit; harvest mid-season, December-February in the low desert (sweetest when picked late). Plant in spring after frost; provide frost protection while young.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension, 'Low Desert Citrus Varieties' (AZ1001); UC Riverside Citrus Variety Collection (Minneola tangelo); UA Pima County Master Gardeners citrus guidance

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