1
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Manilkara bella
« on: September 27, 2022, 02:44:19 PM »where did you get them from?
fruitsyfarms.com has seeds of it available.
System was upgraded and restored 10/8/2021 - Email features have been reactivated
This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.
where did you get them from?
Anyone got these for sale?Bellamytrees just got a lot of new annonas, like leptopetala, deceptrix, etc…
Sometimes I think its better to get a new hobby? But I can't leave the plinias as I am the plinia simp!
What became of this? Is it really different from Cornifolia? Any seeds or seedlings being grown out?
What does "pmd" stand for?Pmd = Private Messaged
Those look like Cacao.
Not familiar with this one, is it a type of Pandanus?
I see a "pitomba BIG" from another seller for sale, is that same? "Pitomba BIG - Eugenia Luschnathiana "The Big Pitomba is a selection of the normal pitomba, and the Big Pitanga is a completely different species.
Wildlands lists "Common Name / Native Name: Big Pitanga"
not sure if same thing... pitanga is uniflora, right?
I'm in Austin, and I have:
reinwardtiana (Cedar Bay cherry)
casearioides (rare)
brasiliensis (grumichama--red/yellow)
victoriana (guayabilla, sundrop)
luschnathiana (pitomba-da-bahia)
stipitata (arazá, araçá-boi)
involucrata (Cherry of the Rio Grande)
involucrata (Cherry of the Rio Grande, "Ben's Beut" selection)
calycina (savannah cherry)
florida (Guamirim)
dasyblasta (aka Eugenia uniflora var. dasyblasta)
Guys i have 1600+ Eugenia Ligustrina seeds(inside the fruit)...i am looking forward to sell or bid these...ebay is no longer accepting bids into USA from outside countries. Help me find a deal with these before they go wasted!! if you know a site were i can sell most of these?
there's the link https://tropicalfruitforum.com/index.php?topic=46824.0
i also have very few seeds of Eugenia Polyclada(EXTREMELY rare) which is endemic to the South West of Dominican Republic...from a dry forest of a semi-arid region. It's almost extinct...i had bought these from the botanical park years ago without ID. Now a botanist told me it's E.Polyclada and they had run out of it! so i gave them a seedling. My plant is an adult and it's not a heavy producer. It's 5 feet tall with side growing branches. Produces a fruit from white to orange then orange to red and it falls. It's not very productive but it produces somewhat bigger fruit than say pitanga and it's sweet and tasty.
later i may have Eugenia Domingensis and Eugenia Monticola seeds.
I'm in Austin, and I have:
reinwardtiana (Cedar Bay cherry)
casearioides (rare)
brasiliensis (grumichama--red/yellow)
victoriana (guayabilla, sundrop)
luschnathiana (pitomba-da-bahia)
stipitata (arazá, araçá-boi)
involucrata (Cherry of the Rio Grande)
involucrata (Cherry of the Rio Grande, "Ben's Beut" selection)
calycina (savannah cherry)
florida (Guamirim)
dasyblasta (aka Eugenia uniflora var. dasyblasta)
Which of the varieties you have are your favorite? Im still waiting for all mine to flower and fruit for the first time.Parkeriana has the most beautiful leaves, Selloi grows the fastest, and Itaguahiensis is the best for pot growing.
I have had issues trying to mix even very close species like calycina onto corg. I won't say it's impossible though, there are a variety of reasons why my grafts may have failed.
See when Flying Fox Fruits gives you a tour of his place and he shows you his dogs, his chickens and things like that...it makes it a more Legit experience...he still will talk about fruit. This is something similar i show rare plants and fruit i grow and i'm hunting but if i walk somewhere then i can show you A PIC OF THE PLACE RELATED to the THE PLANTS OR FRUITS i'm showing