Peach
Prunus persica
Also known as: Common peach, Nectarine (smooth-skin form), Pesca, Pecher, Durazno
Quick facts
- Category
- fruiting
- Difficulty
- intermediate
- Days to harvest
- 730 to 1460 days
- Harvest type
- continuous production over weeks or months
- Spacing
- 360 cm between plants
Environment
- Temperature
- -20–32°C
- pH
- 6 to 7
- EC (hydroponic)
- 1.2 to 1.8 mS/cm
- Daily light
- 24 to 38 mol/m²/day
Climate and zones
- USDA zones
- 5 to 10 (winter low around -29°C or warmer)
- Frost tolerance
- frost hardy (handles regular frost)
- Season
- warm (summer crops, frost-sensitive)
Viable growing environments:
- outdoor year-round (in zone)
USDA zone bounds reflect outdoor year-round survival. Anywhere outside the bounded zone range, this crop still grows as an annual in the warm months (outdoor_seasonal), under cover (greenhouse), or indoors under lights.
Growing systems
Peach works in:
- soil bed
Root mass is heavy - thin-channel systems (NFT, vertical towers) can't hold this crop mechanically, hence the system list above.
Growing media
The substrate the roots sit in. Choice depends on the system (clay pebbles don't fit NFT channels; rockwool isn't used in media beds) and the crop (peach works in the media listed below).
| Medium | pH effect | Water retention | Bacterial surface |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soil-based mix (Potting soil) | varies by source | high | high |
Bacterial surface area matters for aquaponics: clay pebbles, lava rock, and pumice double as biofilter substrate. Low-surface media (rockwool, perlite, pea gravel) work in hydroponics but need a separate biofilter in aquaponics.
Nutrient demand by stage
NPK ratios are relative weights at each growth stage; the nutrient mix calculator scales them to absolute grams or ml. EC targets shift through the plant's life: seedlings need a much lighter solution than fruiting adults.
| Stage | N | P | K | EC target (mS/cm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| seedling | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0.8 |
| vegetative | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1.4 |
| flowering | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1.6 |
| fruiting | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1.6 |
Companion-growing notes
- Heavy uptake of nitrogen. Co-grown crops with the same demand will end up deficient even at "correct" EC. Plan around this in shared reservoirs.
- High transpiration. Reservoir level will need regular top-ups during fruiting or flowering.
Aquaponics suitability
Not recommended for pure aquaponics. Fish waste alone doesn't provide enough of the nutrients this crop demands (typically potassium, calcium, or boron). It can be grown in a hybrid system where the reservoir is supplemented with hydroponic-style nutrients, but expect to dose actively.
Care notes
Not a standard hydroponic crop, but dwarf peach trees on dwarfing rootstock can be grown in large containers (50 L) for outdoor aquaponics integration. pH 6.0-7.0. Full sun (DLI 20+ mol/m2/day). Self-fertile; most peach varieties don't need a pollinizer. The trees must experience winter outdoors for the chilling requirement; indoor year-round growing is not feasible for standard varieties. Fruiting begins at 2-3 years from grafted nursery stock. Each mature container tree produces 5–20 kg of fruit. Peach trees require annual pruning (open-center/vase shape) and careful disease management: peach leaf curl (Taphrina deformans) is the most common fungal disease, preventable with a single dormant-season copper spray. Brown rot (Monilinia) affects ripening fruit. For aquaponics integration, container peach trees irrigated with nutrient-rich system water during the growing season produce well. Genetic dwarf varieties ('Bonanza', 'Garden Gold') stay under 2 m and are well-suited to large containers.
Notable varieties
A starting shortlist of cultivars worth knowing about. Not exhaustive: the seed catalogs list hundreds of named varieties. These are the ones home growers commonly choose between.
| Cultivar | Type | Days | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elberta | open-pollinated | 1095 | 1875 Georgia chance seedling. The original American freestone yellow peach, basis for half the cultivars grown since. Zones 5-9, 800 chill hours. Late-season, ripe August. Self-fertile. The classic Southern peach. |
| Redhaven | open-pollinated | 1095 | 1940 Michigan State release. Yellow freestone, red-blushed skin, sweet. Zones 5-8, 950 chill hours. The most widely-planted peach in cooler climates. Self-fertile. Mid-season. |
| Reliance | open-pollinated | 1095 | New Hampshire 1964 release. The hardiest peach available, tolerates -23C in dormancy. Zones 4-8, 1000 chill hours. Yellow freestone, smaller fruit than Elberta but reliable production where peaches usually fail. The northern-zone peach. |
| Florida King | open-pollinated | 730 | Florida 1972 release. Low-chill cultivar (350 hours), the standard peach for Florida, south Texas, and similar warm-winter regions where most peaches won't get enough chill. Yellow freestone. Self-fertile. |
| Donut peach (Saturn) | open-pollinated | 1095 | Flat-shaped Chinese peach type, sweet and almond-noted. Zones 5-9, 400-500 chill hours. Less juicy than round peaches, easy eating, kid-favorite. Sometimes called Stark Saturn or peento type. |
Verified against: rhs-uk, u-of-georgia-extension, u-of-california-extension, cornell-cea. Last reviewed 2026-05-15.