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Topics - bovine421

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51
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Orange essence versus Orange Sherbet bloom
« on: March 29, 2023, 05:39:03 AM »
My orange sherbet over the last two seasons has had partial bloom. Does orange essence bloom more consistently than OS?

52
Setting up a mini warbler Nursery irrigation Zone.
Spacing on Mini wobblers are 10 to 20 ft
I know the radius is 10  the diameter is 20 ft. I wasn't understanding that 10 ft turns a circle into a square and in my mind thought that the head-to-head spray patterns would not necessarily cancel each other but cause some areas to receive more irrigation than others. Would alternating the height of the risers be beneficial for spray pattern and even water distribution🙂

Since Galatians exposed me to the Miracles of the mini wobbler. I have taken irrigation up as a hobby helping local folks who are small potatoes small fry set up systems. In return I get to pick from their Nursery stock and distribute it through the co-op I've established. All just for fun and entertainment. Laid my eyeballs on some Florida special pineapples yeah boy

Mema in law summer preservation experiment not Alpine most likely it's Kunook Canadian


Along with a 15 lb pressure reducer these are my new friends




53
My grafting list consists of Ah Ping reasoning I'm going to graft it onto the west side of cotton candy which will be visible from my sliding glass door. It is ultra early and has a beautiful red fruit Pleasant to the eye. Secondly some more Dupuis Saigon on two large Valencia Pride. Reasoning it is early delicious and highly recommended by Walter. Thirdly Sunrise on large Valencia Pride. Reasoning it is said to be a good alternative to Jakarta for folks in the interior. Lastly Super Julie in a big way onto ST. Reasoning easy bloomer that I fell in love with last season. At this point in my life I want consistent bloomers because time is precious. In addendum to lastly I acquired a Starch mango tree from Lara Farms that I'm waiting to be able to get budwood. And there's a local seedling of Blackie that came from Jamaica many years ago. That seems by the shape of the fruit to have been cross pollinated with Julie. This will be it's second season of fruiting. Hoping this season confirms last. My friends tree seems uniquely special. So I may be grafting this onto a ital provision tree

Dupuis Saigon budwood got from Walter last season

54
Has anyone grown alpine strawberries from seed in Florida instead of getting transplants from up North. 

https://homeguides.sfgate.com/propagate-alpine-strawberries-21957.html

https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/publication/HS1326

From The Extension: Strawberries for central Florida
Juanita PopenoeFor the Daily Commercial
Strawberries are grown as an annual crop in Florida over the winter.
Have you ever wanted to grow your own strawberries so you can pick those luscious berries at peak ripeness off your own plants instead of the practically tasteless hard ones you get at the store? You can grow your own, but it is not easy and it is very different from how they are grown in the north.


Strawberries are grown as an annual plant in Florida
Strawberry transplants from the north (usually Canada) that have been cold stored and exposed to short day lengths are planted in September-October in Florida so they will start flowering quickly. They will continue to produce flowers and fruit in cycles through April if cool temperatures continue.

55
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Sea weed
« on: March 21, 2023, 03:09:17 PM »

56
Has anyone had experience or an opinion on this variety🙂

57
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Anthracnose on mango fruit set
« on: March 19, 2023, 10:50:27 AM »
I know to spray before bloom then during bloom but after fruit set if there is a small speck or Dot of anthracnose. Can you systemically eradicate it with commercial fungicides or will it spread to the fruit much later during its development. I've been asked not to talk about what I use but it has two modes of action and is commercial and I rotate after two applications of each fungicide in my Arsenal. March winds are problematic for spraying.

58
Tropical Fruit Discussion / LZ vs OS ease of bloom
« on: March 17, 2023, 06:37:37 AM »
Putting disease resistance and taste out of the discussion which of these two trees seems to bloom easier during these warm winters

59
The pecan
 Butter bean and coffee bean
Mango banana and avocado
🙂
The wonderful thing about the pecan is when you're hungry and you don't want processed food. A handful of raw pecans shelled of course has gravitas takes away the hunger pain. Plus makes me feel like i have a bushy tail and can climb a tree.

60
Seems abnormally hot 10-day forecast doesn't show much relief. Wonder how this will affect fruit retention. I'm glad I decided to follow TAF planting and watering guidelines for mango trees. Have increased the duration of watering more so because I forget to check my stopwatch and turn the spigot off but that's probably a good thing. Anyone else feel the heat


ORLANDO, Fla. – There have certainly been rounds of cold in Florida from time to time this winter, but more often than not, it has been warm.

The warmth rose to new heights Friday when every spot in Central Florida tied or set new temperature records.

This is partially because the La Nina pattern has been on full display lately

61
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Pine Island update? 2023 mango season
« on: February 26, 2023, 09:07:16 PM »
This season will it be possible to patronize some of the forum members who have fruit stands and businesses on Pine Island.

62
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Anyone growing Earlygold mango tree
« on: February 26, 2023, 02:09:02 PM »
Someone put this on my radar. Other than TAF website doesn't seem to be much information. How does it compare to other early varieties such as Rosigold. From what I read on squam's website I think that I might want to graft it on two my Beverly that I got from Truly tropical Chris. Wanting is easy getting budwood may be a problem.

63
It's a parent that many trees have bloomed but do you have any partial or holdouts. I'm totally waiting on sweet tart I have no idea what it's going to do Pickering has one bloom showing signs of something to come just not sure if it will be vegetative growth or bloom. Still waiting on the north side of orange sherbert Southside bloomed mini weeks ago. Westside of bugs and Spice still holding out.Dot has about three blooms have no idea what it will do next. Cotton candy has bloomed on the west side. Malika is a South Side Story. Trees that have completely bloomed weeks ago that I'm very impressed with are Little Gem Karen Michelle M-4 Believe It or Not fruit punch. And one of the first Dwarf Hawaii. Definitely a strange year for my Pickering I've also heard of other folks scratching their head.

64
Last mango season I got a paper from a tree purchase that recommended twice a week irrigation during bloom and fruit set. I was conducting an experiment with different micro jet sprinklers I have. The recommended minimum Riser height for a mini wobbler is 1.5 ft . First to test was Skyhawk rotor rain with deflector. It cast a radius of 6 ft. Next was Skyhawk Roto rain standard. It's radius was 12 ft. Final test mini warbler cast a radius of 20 ft. All three of these micro jet sprinklers will be good for different size tree canopies. Which leads me to my question. Reading about Citrus irrigation there is a lot of variables such as soil sand particle size because of leaching and migration of water away from root Zone. My first instinct was quick fast in a hurry which may not be the smart move because of my inpatients. So what would you all recommend as far as gallons per minute or hour on Mango irrigation. Approximate duration and total gallons.

Courtesy courtesy of TAF.
Yes I know Magoo photography




65
Wise
Keitt
Beverly
Neelam/Neelam
Paramount criteria flavor aroma taste

66
In this paper, we found that mango (Mangifera indica L.) fruit treated with 10 μM brassinolide (BL) showed a higher tolerance to cold temperature of 5 °C.

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00726-012-1327-6

This may be  antidotical evidence but this is why I have my doubts. This time last year when we had a radiant freeze a lot of people in the Gulf Coast the FB people sprayed this with Blind Faith and no other protection and most of their trees died or were severely damaged. I have heard claims and statements that it increases the fluidity of the of the membrane of the cell and has a antifreeze effect also that it strengthens the cell wall structure and keeps ice crystals from rupturing. Also that it acclimatizes plant. I understand that they use it in certain grain crops and that the Citrus industry has played around with it. Call me skeptical but I think it's claims as far as freeze protection are overstated. Please disagree with me I want to be wrong. Is it a silver bullet LOL
Last early spring I gave one of my friends 50 rootstock to do a control experiment with brassinole and gibberellic acid
A portion did not receive any spray another portion received recommended spray the last batch got a Frankenstein dose. We didn't observe any noticeable benefit to doing this making it worth the time and effort. I wanted to find out if I sprayed some of my young in the ground trees if I could get an extra vegetative flush per growth season. Next winter I will have him do the same with brassinole and if we have a Foster Freeze we will see what happens.

67
Citrus General Discussion / Citrus cold protection question
« on: January 18, 2023, 08:28:30 AM »
Can someone summarize how Brassinoline plant steroid helps with cold protection? Does the Citrus industry find it is a worthwhile investment to go along with their under tree micro jet irrigations Frost freeze Protection Program

68
Seems like whenever I turn on the Weather Channel something horrific is happening in California. So I am curious if you could ask Mother Nature for a 5-year reprieve. Which act of nature would be at the top of the list. I guess  it would depend on your location and experience but from reading this forum in the past. My first thought was Gophers breeding. What is your top concern?

69
I can find dates of Florida freezes but they don't categorize them as advective or radiant. I have to tell you I did not enjoy Christmas Eve or Christmas Day in 2022. I much prefer a radiant frost or a radiant freeze. I'm hoping that the occurrence of  a advective event is not as common. One of many lessons I learned is when shaking a large limb with an ice load it is advisable to wear a rain jacket and hard hat

70
Christmas Eve and especially Christmas Day freeze was a wealth of Education. I have the full gamut of mango tree sizes. I used the full array of frost freeze protection that I know of. I was able to observe those techniques Within microclimates within my microclimate. I had what I call bird bath weather stations in the four corners north south east and west with a half inch of water. Very interestingly I always thought the North West corner would be the problem Zone. Because of the radiant Wind Block of houses and large oak trees along with a little higher elevation it is not as I thought. I was shocked that the trees did so well and the bird bath never froze even though the bulb thermometer at that location read 32° for about 5 hours. The South Side never froze either. The majority of the damage was done on the North east side. Which is a large open area with a slight lower elevation. The bird bath weather station on the east side froze over. All my trees had undertree irrigation that ran in the late afternoon before Sunset both nights. They say wind chill doesn't affect plants but I think the wind does in dehydration. If we have another event like this what I will do differently. On the northeast corner which is unprotected I will put a propane heater 15,000 BTU under my PPK which received the most damage. I'm also going to purchase two patio heaters that put out 40,000 BTUs and place them strategically so The North Wind carries the Heat across the trees on the southeast side. It's amazing how a 15 mile an hour wind at 30° clears the mind and helps you focus on the problem. It's clearly a different Beast than a radiant event. The duration and the fact that the low level clouds would not let the sun shine exasperated the problem. All the techniques worked majority of my trees are nice and green with a few Jack Frost kisses and starting to bloom. In regards to the the micro jet jet irrigation that was used on the second night because the wind was at or below 10 mph. The tree that was somewhat sheltered from the wind did much better than the fully exposed tree. But because of the duration and the low-level clouds not letting the Sun raise the temperatures more rapidly. I lost two limbs one on each of the two trees with micro jet irrigation 3/4 of the way up the tree. Now I understand why the updated techniques of the Citrus industry is under tree micro jet irrigation. For one in the summertime irrigating under the shade of the canopy of the tree reduces evaporation. Number two during a event such as this the ice buildup is in the lower scaffolding of the tree. So if the limbs bend from the weight chances are they will touch the ground and not break. For Frost on the bloom protection overhead irrigation is definitely the way to go in my opinion. With a downward throwing micro jet you can cover the whole canopy of the tree protecting the bloom. During a freeze event of long duration is where it gets more problematic






71
Tropical Fruit Discussion / V
« on: January 05, 2023, 08:25:04 PM »
V

72
They advise in rotating fungicides and crops so my question is how long does a fungicide resistance last in a fungicide population. Is it just during that fungus life cycle or is it past generationally through the spores.
 Can the genetic cycle be broken?

73
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Bark damage
« on: November 10, 2022, 10:03:08 PM »
One of my mango trees has bark damage on a scaffolding branch that I would like to keep. It is not girdled but is more than halfway. Any chance that this limb can repair itself. If I take it off the tree will look aesthetically unbalanced



Ian damage


Nicole damage to Canistel
Possible candidate for Air layering

74
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Ross sapote compatible with Canistel
« on: October 23, 2022, 10:49:43 AM »
Would it be possible to graft Ross sapote to Trumpo canistel

75
I'm getting some damage on my Valencia Pride not sure who the Copart is but my list of suspects are Mockingbird blackbird blue jay. There is a dead pine tree about a thousand yards across the pond and I have heard a Rattata tat


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