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Messages - achetadomestica

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126
I put my tree under an Oak which seems perfect, a couple early morning hours of sun and the rest filtered.
How wet do you want to keep them and what ph is best. Also fertilizer schedule would be nice. Thanks for sharing
My tree's leaves are very dark green but the tips of the branches keep dying off and I didn't get much new growth this season.
Thanks Starling, the info you gave is the most detailed I have heard from anyone. Hey one last question can you grow them from
cuttings? I think Waxy could make a small fortune if you could grow your productive one from cuttings?

127
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Hard to find trees wish list
« on: November 08, 2017, 01:31:18 AM »
With a little effort I can find all the attemoyas I want.  We do have over 100 attemoya trees in four varieties.   As for attemoyas I’m pretty much just obsessed with Raul’s Elite Attemoya at the moment.   Sugar Apples we are currently only into the firm fleshed varieties.  I’ve gone to most of the fruit tree sales.  I prefer to plant more than ten trees each variety. 

The problem is the two trees I’m looking for got no mention.  Ain’t anyone got seeds?
Annona Salzmanii
Russell’s Sweet Garcinia

Anyone else has anything they can’t find?


What’s up with this elite atemoya? Do you have a spare grafted tree?


http://tropicalfruitforum.com/index.php?topic=22225.msg298838#msg298838
I have never heard of grafted trees available. I got seeds earlier in the year and I have 2 seedlings,
I hope they grow true from seed?


128
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Is a leafless jaboticaba always dead?
« on: November 07, 2017, 09:31:45 PM »
When the branches are dry and brittle then you have a problem. As long as the
branches bend but not snap there is hope. 

129
Tropical Fruit Buy, Sell & Trade / Re: Is Akee fruiting somewhere now ?
« on: October 30, 2017, 10:28:14 PM »
I know a house about 25 minutes away and there are 3 trees there, a couple years ago
I was driving by and saw the bright red fruit on the trees and stopped and talked to the
owner. He was  Jamaican and loves the fruit. Today I was driving by there and noticed only
one tree had a couple fruit on it and they were pink not red, I assume they are not ripe?
The trees looked heavily pruned probably due to the hurricane and may have affected the
production this year?

130
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: ID Mystery Plants Please
« on: October 27, 2017, 11:24:04 AM »
Eugenia Victoriana???

131
Sorry to hear you guys are getting no germination. I got 5 out of 5 to germinate. Maybe post methods that everyone is using to germinate.
I am curious what method you used to get 5 out of 5?

132
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Red Jaboticaba U-Pick
« on: October 25, 2017, 12:21:36 PM »
There is at least one member of this forum that has devoted the space to have a small orchard of red jabos. So it seems
the value of the fruit is catching on. A U-pick is a huge under taking but remember people laughed at Walt Disney.
Maybe throw in the word Organic U-pick and...

133
Tropical Fruit Buy, Sell & Trade / Re: Vietnamese sugar apple
« on: October 24, 2017, 01:18:44 PM »
My first seed germinated using the damp paper towel method,
I can't wait to taste this variety!

135
I vote for Friday 17th

136
2 out of 7 between damp paper towels

so far

137
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: lisa or gefner atemoya ?
« on: October 22, 2017, 02:52:25 PM »
I own a Lisa and  I had a geffner that died. The Lisa had much larger leaves. The fruit
will tell later but it is too soon to tell by the fruit. I had 6 fruit earlier this year and
they looked similar to the picture before they ripened. Actually only 2 ripened and the others
were destroyed by Irma. Eventually the fruit turned a greyish pink color when it ripened.

138
It looks like a red jabo. I have 3 in 15 gallon pots and a couple years ago
I put a different tree in the ground in Florida and it went downhill. I ended up repotting it
and to this day it looks crappy. It has very yellow leaves and I have given it chelated
iron several times and it won't darken up. All my trees have burnt tipping on the leaves.
My three red jabos in the 15 gallon pots have produced fruit since last summer nonstop.
I pushed them under a tree more this year cause the leaves were getting light. I am so
happy with the almost constant supply of red jabos to eat. If I was you I would water it
a little more then every 3 days and increase the size of the pot. I am in Florida though and
if your trees are doing ok in ground then go for it. I assume our ph is not the same. I have
white sand for dirt and have very high ph, Hopefully someone in your area can tell you
their experiences with red jabo but I plan to leave my 3 in a pot, eventually I will put them in 25 gallons
pots next Spring. My soil has allot of perlite in the mix and drains well and I water very frequently.
I try to give my jabos morning sun and indirect sun in the afternoon. 

139
so how long before this fruits ?

i have 3 plants
the largest i moved to a 5gal container a couple of months ago
since then, its not put out any new growth
and the leaves look kind of droopy.

how much sun and water do they like ??

will they fruit OK in part shade ?
I bought 2 plants last year, one was a cutting that is from last year and the other is a seedling
from last year. The cutting fruited real heavy earlier in the year and I got over 75 fruit. I planted it
under a large tree and it gets only a little direct sunlight per day. It has very dark green leaves.
The seedling I planted in full sun and the leaves are not as dark. It has had a few fruit on. Irma hit my
place pretty hard and the leaves were battered along with both plants left leaning. Currently the seedling is
flowering real heavy and also has a great new flush. It is not as dark green as the cutting that is
'mostly shaded but both trees are thriving and fruiting in one year.

140
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: We are alive but battered on St. croix
« on: October 13, 2017, 04:48:39 PM »
Hi Matt
Glad to hear you are alive and in great spirits considering.
It sure could have been worse for us all.

I have red jabos, peanut butter fruit, Na Dai sugar apples, pitangatuba, and muntingia calabura
fruit and maybe a couple Black Suriname cherry seeds now if you are interested? No charge for postage,
If you would rather wait a month or two the offer stands, Also next spring I should have
allot more available and I would be happy to get you something out then.

I lost power for 9 days but only lost a couple trees, half of my lanai flew 150 feet from the back of
my house to the front of my house and squashed a St. Rita fig that I hated. It always dropped the fruit
premature and I couldn't wait to replace it with anything else. Three weeks later the people I hired to
replace my lanai tore down the old lanai and cleaned up the large piece in my yard. The squashed fig
that was covered for three weeks has new leaves and is going to make it. Damn I can't tear it out now!

I lost a large loquat tree that I grew from a seedling and I figure I can put 6 sugar apples in it's place.
I would have never gotten rid of the loquat even though the fruit was average at best and was wasting
too much real estate. It was one of the first trees I planted 7+ years ago. It's amazing how fast fruit
junkies can utilize new space and improve their place to be more productive. Let me know if I can
send you anything?

Mike

141
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Vietnames sugar apple
« on: October 11, 2017, 08:59:13 PM »
I like both!
I can't wait to grow Richard's VSA and try it.

142
Adam is the best and really goes out of his way if you can go by. Call and make an appointment.
Also  around Tallahassee http://www.justfruitsandexotics.com/JFE/

If you are coming down the West coast http://www.fruitscapesllc.com/
is an awesome place


143
Not taste the same.
I disagree, I don't like the sweet star fruit and when I pick the fruit I pick the
under ripe ones with green for the tart flavor. The more green edges the better.

144
Mike T is correct, pick the fruit when it is green and you will have your sour fruit.

145
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Jujube trees in Florida?
« on: October 04, 2017, 11:49:22 PM »
In China the jujube is grown in temperate zones not the subtropics/tropics,
I would guess the one in the Fruit and Spice park is an Indian variety like
Thai Giant?


146
Good Luck limiting yourself to one Eugenia. There are so many to choose from and they
all seem to fruit well in a pot. What about Pitomba, or grumichama, and pitangatuba?
The list goes on,
I do have a COR that is pushing 8' and fruited well the first time this past Spring.
I really enjoyed the fruit! I have another smaller one that has totally different leaves that
is around 4' and two years old. I can't wait to try the fruit. I also have a calycina doing well
and hopefully next spring I will be able to try the fruit as well. I would not want to have to
limit myself to one Eugenia and I especially couldn't pick one favorite. 


147
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: The Ultimate in Lychee Tree Protection
« on: October 01, 2017, 07:46:39 PM »
What's his name?

148
I have several Chinese jujube. I had around 7 and am down to 3. If you are getting
flowers that is a start. I think you need a pollinator and the different varieties flower at
different times so you need one that flowers the same time. Just fruits should be able to
recommend a variety. In China the jujube is grown in temperate zones not in the subtropics/tropics.
It is an uphill battle to fruit Chinese jujube in Florida. I had a sugarcane and eventually after several
years I dug it up. My trees would leave out every spring but didn't have good branch growth,
the more nitrogen I gave them the greener the leaves turned. I have two of the Thai giant or
Indian variety and they produce well here in Florida. I still have a So variety and it is the contorted
variety. It looks neat but no fruit yet. It is a dwarf tree and mine is 6' and has grown the best of the Chinese
ones. It flowered this year but the fruit dropped off early? Good Luck

149
I read Talstar is topical not systemic? Should only effect the bugs eating the leaves?
That is why I am hesitant to use Imidacloprid, and the fact that I used it and it didn't work.
I tried applying the steinernema nematode and nobody mulches more then I do. I added a
bunch of pine needles after the hurricane and hoped there would be an effect on the weevil.
After applying the steinernema I have the least fire ants ever in my yard.

150
Hey Jay
I thought I heard somewhere that mango leaves can be used as an organic pesticide?
I had some weevils on a mallika but they seem to be gone? I contacted this company yesterday
and they said one of their products will kill the weevil but will not kill the larva. I plan to try it this
winter?   http://www.domyownpestcontrol.com/talstar-talstar-one-p-97.html.

Please let us know if the weevils infest the mangos or if they hopefully disappear. I would have to
come see you when you prune and beg you for your leaves if the mango leaves are effective. I saw
a you tube video that said sour milk controls the weevil.???

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