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Topics - lycheeluva

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76
Tropical Fruit Discussion / some jab pics for Adam
« on: January 23, 2012, 09:23:23 AM »
Adam, here are some pics of my jab which I purchased from Jene's  nursery in Fl in April 2008 as a 7 gallon. Your theory about tip fruting being caused by shade is very plausible in my case as it only gets 5-6 hours of sun in the summer, though it is under lights for 12 hours a day during the winter.

Adam, any guess as to which cultiva/variety this may be

newly purchased in APRIL 08



as it was in June 08




blooming in august 08






fruiting in august 08





my jab today, in the garage for the winter under led light, in middle of huge of leaf push with couple of blooms


77
the ever magnanimous Harry of House fame, gave me a tour of his paradise today. Alas, not even a hint of lychee bloom on his many trees. I am deeply concerned for the florida lychee harvest this year. I digress. At the end of the tour we feasted on 2 large Cherimoyas that I purchased from Chrimoya.com. They were excellent, if annoyingly seedy.  Of course, murahilin complained that the fruit had too much flavor. We also tried some of Harry's black sapote. When a fruit looks like someone has just taken a dump into a passion fruit shell, you assume it would have to taste outstanding for it to still be cultivated. Not so. A more tasteless fruit surely cannot exist- the only flavor i could detect at all was a very slight taste of mango bloom. I have never tasted mango blooms but the sapote tasted like how mango blooms smell (and they dont smell good). We also had some very good carembola- cultivars, belll and possum's arse or something like that, some sapodilla- meh, and some pretty good pommelo

Thanks Harry for your omnipotent hospitality and I hope I am forgiven for dissing your black sapotes

78
was looking for the link to this forum because i wanted to access it for the firt time from my work computer. so headed over to garden web to find the post containing the link. doesnt seem to be there anymore. did they take it down? if yes, that is so petty and how on earth did they find out?

79
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Marang video
« on: January 16, 2012, 09:01:31 PM »
one of my fave fruits, and in my opinion, a really under-rated fruit. kinda tastes like banana and guava.

marang

80
a little difficult to believe but so it is

How smelly is the durian?

81
Tropical Fruit Discussion / favorite tropical/subtropical fruit poll
« on: January 15, 2012, 09:12:53 AM »
you can vote 3 times so vote for your top 3

82
In 1989, we planted our first 5 acre lychee, longan and carambola grove, chosing those trees because of their similar nutritional requiremnts. Also interested in discovering a new variety of lychee, we found a farm in Austrailia, bought 18 air layers (6 different varieties, 3 of each variety), potted them up and hoped for the best. As things turned out, after a few years, most of those airlayers had survived and grew alongside hundreds of our Mauritius lychees, also in 3 gal. containers.

USDA would visit annually to check on those newly imported trees. Required by USDA to leave them in pots for a few years, we hoped to plant them out one day and see which varieties thrived and had the best fruiting characteristics. Hurricane Andrew changed those plans. The storm hit in August of 1992 and many of our 3 gal. pots were scattered and destroyed. Our home, built in the middle of the grove, was destroyed and our 5 year old Mauritius lychee grove looked like a parking lot. There was so much work to be done. We were sure the Australian lychee airlayers we potted were history.

While cleaning up we found lychee trees in pots lying underneath the huge pine trees that had fallen from the neighbor's yard. Amazingly, many of those 3 gal. pots had been spared destruction by the large branches that had fallen on top of them, sheltered them and protected them from strong winds and the sun's heat. With the surviving trees, we replanted our 5 acre lychee grove. Some of those potted trees we also sold to another grower who was replanting his grove at the time too.

     
Years passed and one day, during fruit season, while driving through that newly planted grove, plucking luscious pieces of fruit from the trees, we noticed one tree that seemed bigger than all the rest. We tasted the fruit and I remember how surprised we were to find that every piece of fruit had such a small seed and the fruit was exceptionally sweet. Chalking it up to some botanical phenomenon, we didn't think much much about it until the following year when we received a phone call from the same grower who bought some of those post hurricane trees. "Oddly enough," he told us "out of all the trees you sold me, two of the trees seemed very hearty, much bigger than the others, and every piece of fruit had such a small seed.....".  Then it dawned on us, "He has two.... and we have one..... and that makes three.  One of the six different varieties we had brought in from Australia must have been hearty enough to survive the storm.

Well, now the tree was out in the world and other growers wanted to know what the variety was. We couldn't be exactly sure, so we just called it a 'SweetHeart' lychee tree, because the fruit was large, heart shaped and very, very sweet.

In 2010 Florida Star Groves, Inc. was approved for a trademark by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. The registered trademark is for the name SweetHeart Lychee and it's logo. Approved labels and tags can be purchased from Florida Star Groves, Inc. Call 786-255-2528.
 


http://www.sweetheartlychee.com/AboutUS.cfm

83
Tropical Fruit Discussion / My tropical fruit glory year
« on: January 14, 2012, 06:19:26 PM »
just something to help get the forum get up and running.
some pics of my tropicals in 2008 which was my best year for me in terms of tropical fruiting to date, unfortunately all the plants shown in these pics have since died with the exception of the jab which is growing like crazy right now






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