Fruit Tree

Katy Apricot

Prunus armeniaca 'Katy' · Rosaceae

Also called: Katy (low-chill apricot)

Katy Apricot (Prunus armeniaca 'Katy') is a moderate-water fruit tree well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun, with a moderate to fast growth rate. Expect soft pink to white blooms Very early spring.

Katy Apricot (Prunus armeniaca 'Katy') growing in Tucson
Photo: Fir0002 (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wikimedia Commons

Katy Apricot at a glance

Water use
Moderate (established)
Sun
Full sun (6+ hours).
Mature size
12-20 ft tall and wide; commonly kept to 8-12 ft by pruning.
Growth rate
Moderate to fast
Bloom
Soft pink to white, Very early spring (February-March); self-fruitful (no pollinizer required). Fruit ripens early - late May to early June in Tucson, ahead of peak summer heat.
Cold hardiness
Low chill (~350-400 hours) - one of the more dependable apricots for the low desert. Cold-hardy and frost-tolerant when dormant, but its very early bloom is occasionally caught by late frosts; protect open blossoms if a hard frost threatens.
Soil
Prefers deep, well-drained loam; tolerates clay if drainage is adequate. Handles alkaline desert soils with occasional micronutrient supplementation.
Native range
Apricot species native to central/eastern Asia; 'Katy' is a low-chill cultivar selected for warm-winter climates.
Best used as
Edible fruit (fresh, dried, preserves - large freestone), Early-season home orchard tree, Spring ornamental bloom
Wildlife
Early blossoms are an important nectar source for bees; ripe fruit attracts birds.
Toxicity
Fruit flesh is edible/non-toxic. Pits/seeds and leaves contain cyanogenic compounds (amygdalin) - do not let pets or children chew seeds or wilted leaves.

How to grow Katy Apricot in Tucson & the low desert

Watering

Deep, infrequent irrigation to 2-3 ft; about weekly in summer, reduced in cooler months and during dormancy. Maintain steady moisture from bloom through harvest to prevent fruit drop and improve size.

Fertilizer & nutrients

Apply a balanced fruit-tree fertilizer with nitrogen in late winter before bud break and again after fruit set. Iron/zinc chelates correct chlorosis on alkaline Tucson soils. Avoid late-season nitrogen.

Pruning & care

Prune yearly in late winter/early summer to an open-center (vase) form; apricots fruit on spurs and one-year-old wood, so renew fruiting wood and remove crowded/dead branches. Light summer pruning helps control vigor and size.

Notes

One of the best-performing low-chill apricots for Tucson - a large, flavorful freestone that ripens early before extreme heat, and is self-fruitful so a single tree will crop. Main risk is its early bloom meeting a late frost. Plant bare-root in January-February.

Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension - Deciduous Fruit and Nuts for the Low Desert; Pima County / Maricopa County Master Gardeners; Dave Wilson Nursery low-chill stone-fruit data

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