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Tropical Fruit Buy, Sell & Trade / Re: WTB-Paw Paw scion wood of variety called 'Tropical Treat'
« on: January 18, 2024, 11:31:37 AM »
broncn, I sent you a PM.
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Sweet!
I think they hang on the tree for 2 calendar years which might explain the minimal fruiting
It certainly looks like a graft on the original stalk. I have seen avocados sprout out multiple shoots from the seed but yours sprouting out years later is a new one. I’ve definitely seen them send out shoots below the graft that surpass the graft.No, that original stock in middle might of been tried to be grafted but failed that's why you have replacement shoots coming from root stock lessen to what spaugh posted!
If you plan on grafting onto it, pick the most vigorous stalk and (at least) tip the others back while the graft takes. Then take the others out so it concentrates energy on your graft. Height really depends on where you want it to start branching out.
Thanks Jack for your feedback. I do remember Julie telling me there are two Hellen avocados. One is with one "L" Helen, and the other with two "LL" Hellen. I don't remember which one she said is the better tasting one. You must have the good one. I had purchased a grafted seedling of it from Julie years ago from the GreenScence at CSUF but I killed the plant from neglect.Kaz, to clear up Hellen question of one L or two LL's Julie, had told me two LL hellen was good and one L helen not very good.
Greg, glad you are commenting here on this subject. Of the three unknown varieties I mentioned, I though the Derek looked more like a Bacon since some seeds are pointed. But I did compare some of these fruits to Brad's Bacon fruits he sent me and it seems to be different.
The Nancy fruit/tree was said by the worker/gardener at the time at the Huntington Library that this one avocado tasted the best of what they were growing so he grafted it to the current mother tree. I just read again the UCR description of the Bacon since Brad says he thinks these are bacon avocados. The growth habit of this tree sounds similar to the Bacon tree description (vigorous, tall and slender). But the other two (Derek and Hamada) do not match the tree growth description. The are vigorous, busy, wide branches, not slender trees at all. Only the Nancy is could be considered slender. Aslo the leaf color of juvenile and adult leaves do not match the bacon tree descriptions.
As for best early fruiting like these, the Hamada is as good or better than the Fuerte to me. The fruit also has a long shelf life, and even though the skin may look old/wrinkled as I showed, the inside usually is clean and tastes very good. Of all of these three the best one for me is the Hamada fruits. I would say it is better all-around than a Fuerte. It also has a high production of fruits.
Let me post a few more photos of the Hamada (giant) avocado tree and fruits again.