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Messages - Steph

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1
Is the place on Big Island you're thinking of that has a lot of mamey located on Papaya Farms road?   Perhaps the reason they haven't sold well is because they're a mediocre cultivar, or at least one that doesn't produce a great fruit in East Hawaii.   Magana fruits, for example, are losers IMO. 

What varieties produce the best fruits in the Hana area?  Pantin is usually a pretty good fruit in Puna.  I only have two culitivars, Pantin and Pace, and the latter hasn't produced yet.

Yes, that’s the only large Mamey planting I know of in Hawaii. I have 18 Mamey planted which may be the second largest Mamey planting in Hawaii?


Yes, I can’t stand eating Magana. The planting that Philippe made on Papaya Farms Road in Puna I recall being half Magana and half Pantin. I suppose folks who try Magana might be turned off to Mamey. I’ll give it a minor try here on Maui but I don’t know how many people will embrace Mamey.

Mamey grow and fruit well in Hana and elsewhere in Hawaii. We really like Pace and Pantin is wonderful. Though Lorito is said to be superior in that July-August season.

2
lol that’s my Uncle Bill, my step-mother’s brother. Great person.

Aloha, Steph

3
I haven’t heard of many Fall bearing mamey. Pantin season is Jul-Aug and we still have plenty in September. But we have no mamey in Oct-Nov. we got Lara which may fill part of the gap. Jonathan Crane’s Mamey Sapote Growing in the Florida Home Landscape lists Lara ripening Aug-Sep with excellent (emphasized) quality. Abuelo from Acosta is listed as ripening in Oct-Nov with excellent quality. Julian has Lara of course. Is anyone familiar with Abuelo?

4
Thanks so much for this thread Coconut Cream.

In addition to following you fine Florida folks with mangos, (Thanks!), I’ve also taken advantage of your work with mamey. The fruit is still little known and appreciated in Hawaii. I know of only one orchard on the Big Island of about 35 trees. They struggled to sell the fruit. On Maui I might be the biggest mamey grower with only six bearing trees. I’ve planted another 15 including the newly discovered ones.

Are these the best varieties of their season?
Mar-Apr Pace
Apr-Jun Cepeda Especial
Jul-Aug Lorito (Pantin)
Aug-Sep Lara?
Oct-Nov Abuelo?
Dec-Spring Jamaica (Viejo)

I’ve only seen Abuelo in a UF pub. I don’t have any source of scionwood.

I got a Lara during a visit with Julian. It’s said to bear in Fall. I’m surprised it’s not more widely grown because I don’t know of other varieties in its season. Can anyone growing Lara comment on its quality and season?

Aloha, Steph

5
The only mango variety in our Maui orchard that has not flowered and set fruit is… ST Maui.

6
Tropical Fruit Discussion / La Habra Atemoyas
« on: February 19, 2025, 10:02:56 PM »
Many thanks to Mikey and gozp for making these scions available and providing information. Am I correct in thinking that these are seedlings of the Australian cultivars that Frank collected?  Does anyone know how closely the La Habra selections resemble the Australian cultivars?

La Habra Atemoyas

La Habra Blanc - Hillary White

La Habra Gold - Maroochy Gold

La Habra Late - Pinks Blush

La Habra Pink - Hawaiian Pinks Mammoth

La Habra Roja - Maroochy Red

La Habra Special - KJ Pinks (Paxton's Prolific)

La Habra Sun - ?  Perhaps this comes from Tropic Sun

La Habra Pride - recently listed by gozp as an experimental variety from “QLD government research center”

Some folks are listing the Australian cultivars. Does anyone know if the material in the US is derived from seedlings or someone brought in vegetative propagation material. Does anyone know how closely the US material matches the Australian cultivars.

Thanks!

Steph

7
Tropical Fruit Buy, Sell & Trade / Re: SCIONS!!
« on: January 23, 2025, 02:17:33 PM »
LH Pink is a seedlings of pink mammoth from Hawaii.  LH Late is PinksBlush.  LH Special is kJ Pinks/paxton prolific.  LH Gold is maroochy Gold.  LH Roja is Maroochy red.  LH blank is Hilary White.

Thanks Mikey!
Do you know how the fruit quality of the La Habra seedlings compare with their mother varieties?

Aloha, Steph

8
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Anyone familiar with Pomoho lychee?
« on: January 21, 2025, 11:03:10 PM »
Hi sakaigrove,

Poamoho lychee is very very good. Fruits well at low elevation in Hawaii. It’s season has been right after Kaimana for us.

Aloha, Steph
Thanks steph! How is the bearing consistency compared to kaimana?


They are similar in their bearing consistency in our limited experience.  I’ve heard the same from Frankie and others.

9
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Anyone familiar with Pomoho lychee?
« on: January 21, 2025, 12:40:51 AM »
Hi sakaigrove,

Poamoho lychee is very very good. Fruits well at low elevation in Hawaii. It’s season has been right after Kaimana for us.

Aloha, Steph

10
Yes Coconut Cream!  Thanks to all you folks in Florida for your selections, trials, and inspiration. My buddy’s nursery here on Maui is already filling up with superior mango varieties. Thank you!

11
.
Hi! Can you give some more details about your climate? I see that it's dry, so maybe you're getting flowering from drought stress? What are your coldest temps and how long do they last? I'm doing a similar experiment with several varieties in Venezuela - so far we've had strong flowering on M4, sparse flowering on Venus (on its first attempt, so maybe it will improve with age), and a super-precocious flower on a new Cotton Candy graft. Everything else is too young to expect flowers. I've been pretty resigned to eventually top-working Sweet Tart. It's only hope might be the dry season, so it would be interesting to know if someone has experience with it responding to drought. Anyway, thanks in advance for any extra info you can offer on your trials there. Cheers!
Hi Zafra,
It’s rained once since April here. Dry, windy, sunny. I have the trees on drip irrigation but our water supply has been limited. Gets down to mid 50F winter nights. All our 2 1/2 year in the ground mango varieties are flowering, except Pineapple Pleasure. If our experience at all aligns with your place, I wouldn’t give up on Sweet Tart. One tree has a cluster of full sized fruit, there are some small fruit, and several Sweet Tart trees are just coming in to flower.  Venus flowered very well, Cotton Candy is just pushing flower buds.  It’s great to hear that your M-4 are flowering well. I’m planning on 7 of them but they are too young to flower. Let’s keep sharing experiences.
Aloha, Steph

12
Hi Ben,  I wasn’t conflating Pirie and White Pirie. I was just answering Paul’s question about Hawaiian varieties that are grown in Florida. White Pirie has been embraced by Florida mango fanatics.

13
I started planting mangos in Omaopio, lower Kula, Maui, Hawaii (dry climate, 1350’ elevation) in the summer of 2022. One of our concerns is that mango varieties selected in Florida and elsewhere might not receive sufficient stimulus to initiate flower buds in Hawaii. My location does not provide a sufficient test as would a low elevation site. But I’d like to report that almost all of the varieties we’re growing that have been in the ground 2 1/2 years (from 5 gal) are flowering. This includes top Zill selections like Sugarloaf, Lemon Zest, Sweet Tart, Coconut Cream, and Cecilove. Sugarloaf and Coconut Cream also fruited last Fall and Sweet Tart still has full sized fruits hanging on the tree.

Lemon Zest has a reputation of being highly susceptible to Powdery Mildew. So far our blossoms are clean.


And some varieties like Super Julie have already set fruit.


Great gratitude to the folks in Florida who have selected, grown, distributed, and promoted these incredible fruits. For anyone who hasn’t tried them yet, I give testimony, the hype is justified.

14
Hi sakaigrove,

Yes, floral initiation is a potential issue for mango variety introductions. We don’t have enough experience with these newer cultivars to make any conclusions. Initial observations make me optimistic. Our 2 1/2 year old planting is at 1350’ so our results may not directly translate to near sea level. But we had Coconut Cream, Sweet Tart, and Sugarloaf fruit this past season. Currently flowering (before any cold period): Orange Sherbet, Super Julie, Sunrise, Venus, Fruit Punch, Neelam, Sweet Tart, and Cac.

I’m looking for Sonpari scionwood in case your tree is large enough and you’re up for a trade or…

Aloha, Steph

15
Hey Kona Fruit Farm,

I spent some time in South Florida in early July chasing mangos (tried about 60 varieties) and now we’ve had a few fruits at our Kula Maui farm (2 years in the ground). I think we’re very much on the right track following the Florida folks. The mangos recently selected in Florida really are as great as the hype. Apparently there’s at least one other grower in Hawaii that has brought in significant numbers of Florida mango varieties. Here’s a Coconut Cream from Kula. It was great as advertised.


Aloha, Steph

16
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: 2024 FL Mango Season
« on: July 12, 2024, 04:00:04 AM »

 Hey Ben,

At the risk of telephone gaming the story…. I heard that Frankie sent a bunch of mango trees to Gary Zill. This one lost its label. Gary named it Dwarf Hawaiian I suppose because it is a compact grower and he got it from Hawaii. Later it was found to be the Puerto Rican variety Tete Nene. Can we all please call it by its “real” name?  I suppose it might be a lost cause but calling it dwarf Hawaiian can cause confusion.

The Ka’u Dwarf is relatively successful for us on our high rainfall farm. David Frenz, the great nurseryman from Hilo, who introduced it, has switched to selling it as Tommy Atkins!?!  It does have enough similarities to that variety to make me assume it could be a seedling of Tommy.

Happy mango summer. I brought two checked bags of Florida mangos with me to Norway so we’re good for now.

Aloha, Steph

Oh very cool, Steph. Always fun to learn more about these varieties and how they are introduced or found in the first place. It’s a classic flavored one ya?

Alex lists Tete Nene in the “Coconut” flavor group. But in my very limited experience the main flair profile I’ve experienced is spicy West Indian.

You’re welcome to join me in the crusade to use the name Tete Nene rather than Dwarf Hawaiian. Maybe I should learn how to pronounce Tete Nene before I get too carried away. Any Puerto Ricans here to help me out?  Does anyone know how to pronounce Tete Nene?

17
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: 2024 FL Mango Season
« on: July 08, 2024, 08:27:27 AM »

 
Any idea how it got the name dwarf Hawaiian? It was found in Puerto Rico. There is a variety called ka’u dwarf here but I’m pretty sure that is a different mango
[/quote]

Hey Ben,

At the risk of telephone gaming the story…. I heard that Frankie sent a bunch of mango trees to Gary Zill. This one lost its label. Gary named it Dwarf Hawaiian I suppose because it is a compact grower and he got it from Hawaii. Later it was found to be the Puerto Rican variety Tete Nene. Can we all please call it by its “real” name?  I suppose it might be a lost cause but calling it dwarf Hawaiian can cause confusion.

The Ka’u Dwarf is relatively successful for us on our high rainfall farm. David Frenz, the great nurseryman from Hilo, who introduced it, has switched to selling it as Tommy Atkins!?!  It does have enough similarities to that variety to make me assume it could be a seedling of Tommy.

Happy mango summer. I brought two checked bags of Florida mangos with me to Norway so we’re good for now.

Aloha, Steph

18
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Jakfruit tasting reviews
« on: July 04, 2024, 03:50:55 AM »
We sometimes get yellowish Ziemann’s Pink jakfruit, especially off-season. They are not good. A fully matured fruit will have deep, ruddy orange flesh, lots of latex, and a wonderful rich, complex flavor. I don’t see any pink either but the Australian who named it might have stronger artistic sensibilities than I do.

19
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Recs for Maui Trip???
« on: July 03, 2024, 12:52:23 AM »
I’m away in Florida so can’t help you personally. I don’t buy or sell fruits at the farmer’s market but my impression is that the few interesting fruits sell out very quickly. O’koa Farms store in the same mall is the most likely store to have anything that’s available locally. Aaaand some things from afar. He carries frozen durian and more from Lindsay of yearofthedurian.com. I just got a note that Mathematical Mike of Nahiku has fresh durian now but it’s quite an adventure to get them. A very sensitive documentary on him is on YouTube. “Art of Life”. https://youtu.be/7gUh8j5ui0o?si=t1RjS_jI5OAunH5y  Not a fruit film but his huge durian tree is a part of the story.

He’s a photo of him from earlier today



Laulima Fruit stand out in Kipahulu might have some interesting fruits.

Guavas and strawberry guavas are terrible weeds in wet areas. Passiflora also grow wild. Mountain Apples are in season and can be found in many river gulches.

Good luck!

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Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Recs for Maui Trip???
« on: June 29, 2024, 12:31:23 AM »
O’koa Farms store and upcountry farmer’s market (Saturday morning) at Kulamalu in Pukalani.

21
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Artocarpus lanceifolius
« on: June 04, 2024, 04:42:46 PM »
I’ve been growing these for 20 years. They’ve been consistent good bearers, though not last year and this year after a windstorm broke some branches. Productivity and pollination have been good. Very easy to harvest transport and eat unlike some other Artocarpus sp. I find similar flavor components that others have mentioned. We really enjoy them. I put marang right at the top of a fruit quality list but keledang is very good. Not being quite as good as marang is not a condemnation but high praise.   And they are so much easier to deal with. I think the trees are easier to manage also.
I hear there are larger types but I haven’t been able to track them down. We graft them on jackfruit but the seedlings should be fine.

Aloha, Steph

22
Apparently 390 tasting tickets sold. 10 still available. Non-tasting tickets still available. I’m not aware of a limit on those.

23
Only 17 tasting tickets left.

I got 11am thanks to hero johnb!

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You’re my hero John. I’m signed up. See you all there.

25
I’ll be flying in from Maui.

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