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Texas Pink Pomegranate Tree

Texas Pink Pomegranate Tree

Texas Pink Pomegranate Tree – Sweet-Tart, Stunning & Built to Thrive

The Texas Pink Pomegranate Tree is one of the most ornamentally beautiful and culinarily rewarding fruit trees you can grow. Developed and proven in the demanding heat of Texas, this variety delivers large, blush-pink pomegranates with sweet-tart, jewel-like arils and a notably lower seed count than standard pomegranate varieties — making them a pleasure to eat fresh, juice, and cook with.

From its spectacular coral-pink blossoms in spring to its heavy clusters of pink-blushed fruit in fall, the Texas Pink is a four-season showstopper that earns its place in any edible landscape. Available in sizes from 3 Gallon through 6–7 ft.

Why You’ll Love the Texas Pink Pomegranate Tree

  • Sweet-Tart Pink Arils: Juicy, jewel-like seeds with a balanced sweet-tart flavor — less astringent than many pomegranate varieties, with a bright, refreshing finish
  • Lower Seed Count: Softer, less prominent seeds than standard pomegranates — easier and more enjoyable to eat fresh
  • Spectacular Ornamental Appeal: Coral-pink trumpet flowers in spring, glossy green foliage through summer, and large blush-pink fruit in fall — one of the most beautiful fruiting trees available
  • Drought-Tolerant: Once established, highly drought-tolerant — thrives in hot, dry conditions with minimal supplemental watering
  • Self-Fertile: One tree produces a full harvest — no pollination partner needed
  • Heat-Loving: Thrives in hot summers — the more heat, the sweeter and more flavorful the fruit
  • Long-Lived: Pomegranate trees are exceptionally long-lived — a well-sited Texas Pink can produce abundantly for decades

Growing Zones & Care Guide

  • USDA Hardiness Zones: Best planted in the ground in Zones 7–11. Texas Pink thrives in hot, dry climates with mild winters — it is well-suited to the American Southwest, Southeast, and Gulf Coast regions where summers are long and hot.
  • Zones 5–6 (Container Growing): Grow in a 15–25 gallon container and move to a frost-free location for winter. Pomegranates go semi-dormant in winter and require minimal care during this period. A cool garage or basement works well.
  • Sunlight: Full sun — 8+ hours of direct sunlight daily for best fruit production, sweetness, and color development. Pomegranates are one of the most heat- and sun-loving fruit trees available.
  • Watering: Water regularly during the first growing season to establish roots. Once established, Texas Pink is highly drought-tolerant — deep, infrequent watering is preferred. Consistent moisture during fruit development prevents splitting. Avoid overwatering.
  • Soil: Adaptable to a wide range of soils — sandy, loamy, or clay — as long as drainage is adequate. Tolerates slightly alkaline soils (pH 5.5–7.5) better than most fruit trees.
  • Fertilizing: Light feeding with a balanced fertilizer in early spring. Avoid excess nitrogen, which promotes foliage over fruit. Established trees in fertile soil often need minimal fertilization.
  • Pruning: Prune in late winter to remove suckers, crossing branches, and dead wood. Pomegranates can be trained as a single-trunk tree or left as a multi-stem shrub — both forms are productive. Remove suckers from the base regularly to maintain your preferred form.
  • Harvest Window: September through November, depending on your climate. Fruit is ripe when it develops a deep pink-red blush, sounds hollow when tapped, and the skin begins to crack slightly at the crown. Do not harvest early — pomegranates do not ripen off the tree.

Compare With Another Great Pomegranate

Growing in a cooler climate? Our Cold Hardy Red Pomegranate extends pomegranate growing into Zone 6 and colder microclimates, with deep red arils and exceptional cold tolerance. A great alternative for northern gardeners who want to grow pomegranates in the ground.

Heat-loving, drought-tolerant, and stunningly beautiful — the Texas Pink Pomegranate Tree is the ultimate warm-climate fruit tree for gardeners who refuse to settle for ordinary.

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Texas Pink Pomegranate Tree

$99.95

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Description

Texas Pink Pomegranate Tree – Sweet-Tart, Stunning & Built to Thrive

The Texas Pink Pomegranate Tree is one of the most ornamentally beautiful and culinarily rewarding fruit trees you can grow. Developed and proven in the demanding heat of Texas, this variety delivers large, blush-pink pomegranates with sweet-tart, jewel-like arils and a notably lower seed count than standard pomegranate varieties — making them a pleasure to eat fresh, juice, and cook with.

From its spectacular coral-pink blossoms in spring to its heavy clusters of pink-blushed fruit in fall, the Texas Pink is a four-season showstopper that earns its place in any edible landscape. Available in sizes from 3 Gallon through 6–7 ft.

Why You’ll Love the Texas Pink Pomegranate Tree

  • Sweet-Tart Pink Arils: Juicy, jewel-like seeds with a balanced sweet-tart flavor — less astringent than many pomegranate varieties, with a bright, refreshing finish
  • Lower Seed Count: Softer, less prominent seeds than standard pomegranates — easier and more enjoyable to eat fresh
  • Spectacular Ornamental Appeal: Coral-pink trumpet flowers in spring, glossy green foliage through summer, and large blush-pink fruit in fall — one of the most beautiful fruiting trees available
  • Drought-Tolerant: Once established, highly drought-tolerant — thrives in hot, dry conditions with minimal supplemental watering
  • Self-Fertile: One tree produces a full harvest — no pollination partner needed
  • Heat-Loving: Thrives in hot summers — the more heat, the sweeter and more flavorful the fruit
  • Long-Lived: Pomegranate trees are exceptionally long-lived — a well-sited Texas Pink can produce abundantly for decades

Growing Zones & Care Guide

  • USDA Hardiness Zones: Best planted in the ground in Zones 7–11. Texas Pink thrives in hot, dry climates with mild winters — it is well-suited to the American Southwest, Southeast, and Gulf Coast regions where summers are long and hot.
  • Zones 5–6 (Container Growing): Grow in a 15–25 gallon container and move to a frost-free location for winter. Pomegranates go semi-dormant in winter and require minimal care during this period. A cool garage or basement works well.
  • Sunlight: Full sun — 8+ hours of direct sunlight daily for best fruit production, sweetness, and color development. Pomegranates are one of the most heat- and sun-loving fruit trees available.
  • Watering: Water regularly during the first growing season to establish roots. Once established, Texas Pink is highly drought-tolerant — deep, infrequent watering is preferred. Consistent moisture during fruit development prevents splitting. Avoid overwatering.
  • Soil: Adaptable to a wide range of soils — sandy, loamy, or clay — as long as drainage is adequate. Tolerates slightly alkaline soils (pH 5.5–7.5) better than most fruit trees.
  • Fertilizing: Light feeding with a balanced fertilizer in early spring. Avoid excess nitrogen, which promotes foliage over fruit. Established trees in fertile soil often need minimal fertilization.
  • Pruning: Prune in late winter to remove suckers, crossing branches, and dead wood. Pomegranates can be trained as a single-trunk tree or left as a multi-stem shrub — both forms are productive. Remove suckers from the base regularly to maintain your preferred form.
  • Harvest Window: September through November, depending on your climate. Fruit is ripe when it develops a deep pink-red blush, sounds hollow when tapped, and the skin begins to crack slightly at the crown. Do not harvest early — pomegranates do not ripen off the tree.

Compare With Another Great Pomegranate

Growing in a cooler climate? Our Cold Hardy Red Pomegranate extends pomegranate growing into Zone 6 and colder microclimates, with deep red arils and exceptional cold tolerance. A great alternative for northern gardeners who want to grow pomegranates in the ground.

Heat-loving, drought-tolerant, and stunningly beautiful — the Texas Pink Pomegranate Tree is the ultimate warm-climate fruit tree for gardeners who refuse to settle for ordinary.

Texas Pink Pomegranate Tree | Henderson Garden Supply