The Tropical Fruit Forum
Tropical Fruit => Tropical Fruit Discussion => Topic started by: BonsaiBeast on March 14, 2019, 03:45:14 PM
-
I have a spot in the front yard that could use a nice fruit tree. But, I want the tree to be evergreen and have good tasting fruit.
I was thinking of something like a loquat, although I already have one. Any other ideas?
-
Dragonfruit post! ;D
-
Sunquat is very pretty
-
Carambola is a pretty tree.
-
Sapodilla
-
Second sapodilla
My favourite looking fruit tree.
-
sapodilla, lychee, or tamarindo.
-
Those tropicals dont stay looking as beautiful all year here in CA.
-
Dragonfruit post! ;D
Wait, you're kidding right?? ;D
-
Lychee. My two are duds, but they're so handsome I can't bring myself to cut them down.
-
Sapodilla or Mango tree.
-
malay apple stunning flowering.Imagine thousands of blooms with a hundred hummingbirds after the necter.
Or blooming durian tree.
https://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images;_ylt=AwrE1xqH2opctIoAJQBXNyoA;_ylu=X3oDMTEyc2wxbzd0BGNvbG8DYmYxBHBvcwMxBHZ0aWQDQjcwMTJfMQRzZWMDc2M-?p=malay+apple+stunning+flowering&fr=opensearch (https://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images;_ylt=AwrE1xqH2opctIoAJQBXNyoA;_ylu=X3oDMTEyc2wxbzd0BGNvbG8DYmYxBHBvcwMxBHZ0aWQDQjcwMTJfMQRzZWMDc2M-?p=malay+apple+stunning+flowering&fr=opensearch)
https://www.google.com/search?q=blooming+durian+tree&client=firefox-b-1-d&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwivmqTz3YLhAhXQwVkKHV3QAWYQ_AUIDigB&biw=1296&bih=662 (https://www.google.com/search?q=blooming+durian+tree&client=firefox-b-1-d&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwivmqTz3YLhAhXQwVkKHV3QAWYQ_AUIDigB&biw=1296&bih=662)
-
Dragonfruit post! ;D
Wait, you're kidding right?? ;D
What you don't want a dragonfruit post as the centerpiece of your front yard? ;D. All your neighbors can admire the huge blooms. At 2AM. ;)
-
By far Lychee is my most handsome tree. A slow grower and just great waxy shiny leaves.
-
Breadfruit is one of the ones I've liked the best, but it won't grow here... (I wish there were another Artocarpus with similarly large leaves that would grow here.)
-
I like sapodilla also. I have one right next to the street. Even the fruit looks pretty, and it's so freakin' delicious! People don't touch them. (Only squirrels--damn rodents!) And as large, mature trees they're still beautiful.
-
Star apple or sapodilla
-
Don't know about your dry air but jaboticabas are pretty nice looking. I have
several in pots and a couple sabaras in the ground. I also have a contorted
mulberry that fruits. In the summer it has big impressive leaves and it is one
of the few I have that loses every leaf in the Winter. It is also one of the last
trees to flush in the spring. And last I have a So jujube that is also a contorted
tree. It hasn't produced and probably never will. It's a dwarf tree and looks really
different. I just can't dig it up for something productive.
-
Syzygium malaccense is gorgeous. Pitanga (E. unifflora) can be really pretty when trained as a tree. Actually, most trees / large shrubs in Myrtle subfamily are quite decorative when properly pruned. Another option is Arbutus unedo - there's a bunch of them next to Qualcomm W building. The fruit tastes like rotten carrot though. Bleh! Mexican manzanita is gorgeous but picky about conditions. Native cherries (hollyleaf, catalina, chokecherry) are pretty but usually deciduous. Date palm is impressive when well taken care of. Queen palm (they're all over San Diego) has edible fruit, but it's a bit of an acquired taste. Citrus are great. Black sapote is pretty but may or may not do well depending on where you are in San Diego. White sapote is pretty but messy. There's a bunch more - just pick whichever you like! It's the space that's the problem most of the time O_o
-
Also, pomegranate.
-
I have always thought guava was I good looking tree. Ice cream bean is a good looking tree that is very different
-
Purple Guava
Healthy looking mango
Star apple
-
I second jaboticaba. Go for a nice sized red (~2" diameter trunkt). Keep the soul acidic and auromatic frequent irrigation....the peeling bark and flowering every 2 months or so that results in green redish fruits....cant go worng.
-
Only problem with jaboticaba is that it will be a good 50 years before it provides some shade :-). For all practical purposes, I would consider jabo to be a fruit "bush."
-
Stone fruit such as the nectazee or the red Ilama are very pretty.
-
Loquats are nice but i find them dusty when you have to walk underneath.
Lychee or Longan make nice shade trees.
Possibly Kwai Muk
The Wax Jambus I've seen out there look pretty nice as well
-
+1 for starapple/caimito. Beautiful tree, deep green leaves with bronze underside, and nice growth habit.
-
The red-fruited surinam cherries are the most beautiful in my opinion because they fruit often with extremely vivid yellow/orange/red fruit, and even the leaves are glossy and decent-looking, and of course are red when young.
Bananas are another obvious option.
-
Calamondin x Citrofortunella microcarpa is well known as an indoor / outdoor container ornamental.
Aside from the beautiful, somewhat flattened, vivid bright-orange globular shaped fruits, the plant itself is quite handsome, and makes an excellent houseplant for the indoors. Calamondin has been praised by scores of writers of indoor plant books. Alfred Byrd Graf mentioned the calamondin in ‘Exotica’ (1957) & his ‘Exotic House Plants’ (1976) book, along with Charles Marden Fitch in ‘The Complete Book of Houseplants’ (1972). Considering this acclaim, it’s no doubt that the calamondin is an excellent plant not just for the tropics, but for northern cities as well, when pruned as a small bush.
“The small flowers are fragrant and bear white petals... In the opinion of many, the calamondin is among the most ornamental and beautiful of all citrus trees and its fruits among the more intriguing for culinary use” (Hawkes, Alex D.). (https://i.postimg.cc/3kqRWnj8/835-C1-A12-C5-F5-430-D-8-CF6-3-E59-A143-B709.jpg) (https://postimg.cc/3kqRWnj8)
-
Calamondin x Citrofortunella microcarpa is well known as an indoor / outdoor container ornamental.
Aside from the beautiful, somewhat flattened, vivid bright-orange globular shaped fruits, the plant itself is quite handsome, and makes an excellent houseplant for the indoors. Calamondin has been praised by scores of writers of indoor plant books. Alfred Byrd Graf mentioned the calamondin in ‘Exotica’ (1957) & his ‘Exotic House Plants’ (1976) book, along with Charles Marden Fitch in ‘The Complete Book of Houseplants’ (1972). Considering this acclaim, it’s no doubt that the calamondin is an excellent plant not just for the tropics, but for northern cities as well, when pruned as a small bush.
“The small flowers are fragrant and bear white petals... In the opinion of many, the calamondin is among the most ornamental and beautiful of all citrus trees and its fruits among the more intriguing for culinary use” (Hawkes, Alex D.). (https://i.postimg.cc/3kqRWnj8/835-C1-A12-C5-F5-430-D-8-CF6-3-E59-A143-B709.jpg) (https://postimg.cc/3kqRWnj8)
What makes this species of citrus more ornamental than others?
-
Macadamia nut
Fragrant blooms and pretty tree
-
Féin is is very ornamental
-
Red banana but longan when putting out panicles and fruits. Not that I have Longan. Lychee was a fail for me. Too much calcium ph in the soil. A neighbor has a lychee that has not grown in 7 years but I see zero mulch and mostly likely zero fert/ This house previously had many papaya outside.