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Citrus General Discussion / Re: Picking Cara Cara
« on: November 07, 2015, 02:36:26 PM »
Nice!
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Actually, if you have a solution and no expectation to make money off of it why not make the information freely available?The third sentece in my post above is the best answer. Back in the eighties the federal government put three men in federal prison for technology transfers to Asia. Clinton and Bush can transfer military technology to China and India, but a regular citizen like me they can imprison for an unauthorized agricultural technology transfer even if I am the one who discovered it. Again, in a perfect world......
My Rio Red are pretty tasty in early April though they taste pretty good as early as late February. I've taken the last fruit off the tree as late as early June and it was still good.No matter what you do, a young 4 year old container grapefruit tree will not produce all that quality of a fruit. It is just too young. However, with grapefruit, most authorities say to leave the fruit hang on the tree until March for the best tasting fruit. The commercial grapefruit industry picks their fruit as soon as possible to get the fruit on the market so they can receive payment. If they would delay the harvest until March, many more people would like grapefruit than do now. - Millet
Not all grapefruit is handled that way. Different types/varieties ripen at different times. The reds are later in the season, or into mid to late spring of the following year while the whites are earlier in the season (weather plays a bigger role in quality with any citrus, you need to have the cold spells to sweeten them up and improve the quality ). I have never seen any benefit of leaving some of the early season whites hang on the tree for months. No matter how long you let a white stay on the tree, it will never have the characteristics of a good red. Then there is the matter of personal preference, some like whites better and some like reds better.
I've heard of growers using sprays to get the nutrients into trees so they produce normally. But that's not really a cure. It extends the life of the tree. Do the trees die some years later? That's what I heard.In my tests spraying the leaves does little good to the plant. You have to get the nutrients flowing easily from the roots up again and help the plant kill the bacteria while this is happening. My solution is a root zone drench. While it it is easily made, it requires a precise mixture during manufacture and when mixing the concentrate with water. Too strong a solution will quickly kill the tree. The ratios of each manufacturing ingredient and the order mixed do make a difference, so even though some have tried to get a general idea of the things I use, without the procedure they can try all day and have a very slim chance of actually getting it right. I will say that the process I use to make the ajuvant drench is easily scalable so ramping up to quantites needed to help the world would be limited by funding availabilty, component availability, and distribution. I am not going to do this myself. I am tired and retired. I tested proof of concept and workability. It is easy. It is surprisingly cheap to make. It is potent in small doses. It is not glamorous like genetic splicing, root grafting, or other involved fare, but is that really the solution people want? Some scientist a couple of years ago said we could splice pig DNA to help. Really? Look it up on Google. I'm out for now!
Again, if there's a cure using conventional methods, I would think they would have found out about it sometime during the last century of HLB presence there
. They're probably doing the same thing we do here to delay the symptoms and extend the life of the tree.
On the other hand, plants are not that defenseless. They produce chemicals against invaders. Bitterness, toxic substances, etc. Symbiotic fungi also help out in nutrient uptake and defense. Maybe a very healthy tree can ward off a small scale HLB infection.
Is the Changsha high quality? Few seeds, great taste, good acid/sugar balance?I hope those work out for you. I have a Miho sat which makes the most excellent sweet fruit. It's like candy only better. Long live the sats!
I have an Arctic Frost sat which is a very cold hardy satuma/changsha hybrid. It's supposed to be excellent. Hope to find out later this year.
Are you going to share your method with us?I posted to let the fine folks here know that it is not impossible. There will be a time when the best solutions become known. In the meantime consider the below.
I have never tasted an Orangequat. I am partial to both sour tasting fruit, as well as sweet tasting fruit. Let us know what you think of Orangequat's taste when your fruit matures. I'll be interested. I'll bet Mr. Texas has tasted Orangequat before. - Millet