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Messages - nullzero

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3451
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Avocado Varieties of Southern California
« on: February 16, 2012, 10:15:27 PM »
Quote
Eventually I will have a plot of land big enough to plant out all those varieties :P. Fresh avocados all year round :).

Nullzy

A lot of those avocados overlap. I have pinkerton, Hass and Shawill these will cover the entire year. I also have two later ones Holiday and Reed  because of their superior quality.

JF

I heard about sharwil and some others being very good at holding fruit on the tree. Currently have a Bacon and a Hass in ground, I am about to harvest the fruit in a few weeks.

3452
Know nothing about this variety, you may have good luck asking on cloudforest. There are several members there growing quite a few different varieties of White Sapote. One of better White Sapotes is Subelle. I am growing this in a 20 gal container, it flowers and produces in a container. Subelle is always dwarf variety.

3453
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Avocado Varieties of Southern California
« on: February 15, 2012, 01:17:27 AM »
pics of different varieties by month



Eventually I will have a plot of land big enough to plant out all those varieties :P. Fresh avocados all year round :).

3454
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Growing Mango from Seed
« on: February 14, 2012, 08:46:56 PM »
Hey John coincidence, I recently received an e-magazine "Escape from America" and Fiji was one of the places featured, seems like it would be a great place to retire to someday.

I went on a google earth tour and noticed lots of agriculture on the main Island,  what is it that they grow there? it didnt look like rice or coconuts, more of a  bush or small trees.

Im thinking its probably Cassava or Taro?

3455
Here is a picture of the Julie flowering in a 10 gal container.


3456
Wish I had a mango tree that big. Julie mango I have is flowering, but its like 1/3 of the size of PSM. I am thinking next mango variety I get is going to be a super vigorous one. The mango trees in SoCal stall on growth for about 4 months.

3457
Nice pictures they look very happy.

3458
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: PlantOGram Woo hoo!
« on: February 14, 2012, 12:35:36 PM »
Congrats Jeff, I have been thinking of getting a mango tree from plantogram. However, I must hold off due to my budget. Its much more affordable to get scion wood and graft onto manila seedlings.

3459
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Any Advice For Growing Mangoes In SoCal?
« on: February 14, 2012, 03:17:30 AM »
I bought the tree from my near by home depot, it is a regular manila mango. Ever since i have planted it in the wrong location it's health has declind. Do you have any other advice on soil etc for future planting of the tree?

Make sure you amend with plenty of organic material. Also get soil buster if you have heavy clay soil. Another problem is the high PH water and soil, to counter this you need to use acid lower things. Mulching with pine bark/pine needles should help somewhat.

3460
Tropical Fruit Buy, Sell & Trade / Re: Seeds of Cordia africana
« on: February 13, 2012, 03:21:29 AM »
Will let you know - anyway - no more Cordia africana seeds available before next season.

Thanks

3461
Loquat- some varieties selected by Larry Shatzer of Our Kids Nursery, near me in Orlando, are the most amazing I've had!  I used to hate loquat, and I always thought loquat was a trash, parking lot fruit...but when I tasted and saw ones with sweet delicious, white flesh (light yellow), about the size of a goose egg, it was amazing!!!  I am procuring bud wood, and grafting all of his varieties this year!! He has kept them to himself so to speak, not selling that many over the years...I can understand, but it's time to share!  Very healthy fruits, in season when others aren't, sometimes producing multiple crops per year!

I am very interested!!!  Picked some parking lot loquat yesterday and I like that too...only problem is you get too many (unripe) sour and shriveled ones and not enough dead ripe and sweet. But I eat them anyway.

In the USA loquat is mostly treated as an ornamental plant. In Japan the fruits are highly valued and very many cultivars have been developed, including giant sized fruits and a seedless loquat.
Oscar

Would love some scion from Japan  ;D. Loquats are great spring time fruit, more attention should be given to the development of new varieties besides the standard Big Jim. I had a 'Vista White' loquat but unfortunately it got a bad case of blight and died.

3462
Cool. Can you post the link here or email it? Thanks.

I need you to respond to my email (tropicalfruitforum forwards over to your email). It was obtained from a African website (had extremely long load time). I can email it to you once you respond in the email.

3463
I have a PDF to share with you, it has detailed germination info and info about the Marula.

3464
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Pictures of New Yard Happenings
« on: February 09, 2012, 08:31:09 PM »
Hey Nullzy,

Right Now, I would have to say my Fuyu Persimmon, Satsuma Tangerine, and Moro Blood Orange.  Although you can see, right now I have come Cherimoyas, and last year had Capulin Cherries, Jamaican Cherries, Acerola, Tons of Poha Berries. Pepino Melons, Mulberries, and Surinam Cherries, which have all fruited nicely for me in the past and I expect a nice crop from them this year as well. But Fuyu and Satsuma in terms of shear numbers for sure.

Jacob
Really good to hear, I have a Hana Fuyu my GF gave me for a present. I am hoping it will be a productive container tree. So far blueberries, citrus, and apples have been productive for me.

3465
NZ- I've never been able to eat prickly pears without getting several really annoying spines in my fingers and a couple also sometimes get into my tongue.

The trick is to lightly roast the fruit over a gas stove (about 15 secs). This will burn off the glochids, then wash after. If you have a small blow torch it would be even faster and easier. Also its said that using a hot knife (heated knife) prolongs the storage life of the Opuntia (prickly pear) fruit when harvesting.

Quote
I believe it has a lot to do with preparation most people would agree that your typical lemon is sour and has a lot of acid. yet there seems to be no problem with popularity. and not many would eat a lemon out of hand.

So true especially with a lot of cactus fruit. Optimally prickly pear is prepared as a puree, blended, or made into jams, wines, and desserts. Fresh eating is great as well if seeds do not offend.

3466
Most cactus fruit are overlooked. Take a look at these Stenocereus queretaroensis fruit (they come in all different colors) http://www.flickr.com/photos/samblackman/139206871/#in/photostream/, I have never tried the fruit yet. But I hear people raving about how it has a refreshing sweet and sour taste.

3467
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Lychee grafted onto Longan?
« on: February 09, 2012, 04:21:09 PM »
Very interesting, I have always heard that Lychee's were very hard to graft. If Lychee's can be grafted to Longan, it would make Lychee's much more California friendly. It seems the Lychee leaves are not as thick and tolerant of the arid climate, compared to Longan leaves.

3468
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Pictures of New Yard Happenings
« on: February 09, 2012, 04:16:22 PM »
Jacob,

Also great pictures! Btw, what fruit plants are your most productive in containers?

3469
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Australian Finger Lime
« on: February 09, 2012, 04:11:43 PM »
The Australian Finger lime seeds are sold on ebay fresh. May be a good option to start by seed.

3470
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: seedless lychees?
« on: February 08, 2012, 03:46:07 PM »
Sounds like plant hormones or some sort of treatment lead to aborted seeds.

3471
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: help me choose a mango
« on: February 08, 2012, 12:50:39 PM »
thanks Null- would love to see the pics!

This photo was taken 1/16/12, when the Julie was pushing new growth.



Some photos taken 2/5/12, starting to flower




Tree had anthracnose when I received it, it eventually cleared up after about 8-10 months (cleared up probably earlier but shed all previous damaged leaves). I used a fungicide treatment, the CA weather.

Here was the tree 3 months after receiving it 10/30/10, mangoes did not hold (think it was to small and the anthracnose) tree has no problem bearing young.

3472
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: help me choose a mango
« on: February 08, 2012, 10:33:34 AM »
harry- wasnt my memory- I googled Rapoza and saw the post.
I decided to go with Julie. Everyone has to have a Julie!
so in a few months time, I should be the proud owner of
Hanging Green,  No Mai Tze, Emperor lychees and Julie Mango.
Really excited.
I will almost certainly have the only Hanging Green,  No Mai Tze lychee trees in NY!

Good pick with Julie, was an easy pick for me after hearing all the very positive things about the taste. My Julie is flowering now, will update with some photos of the tree if your interested. I am growing it in a 10-12 gal container, the graft was very low and stout.

3473
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: help me choose a mango
« on: February 07, 2012, 09:41:00 PM »
I am growing Julie, have not tried the fruit yet. But it has a excellent dwarf form, love the tree hoping the fruit is excellent!

3474
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Foliar Feeding
« on: February 07, 2012, 07:17:54 PM »
I planted a 3g Lemon Zest last year and decided I did not want it to bloom but instead put out vegetative growth. Online research showed that GA3 could possibly stop the tree from pushing new growth. I mixed up some GA3 without measuring and sprayed the tree twice. I subsequently lost all the leaves and the tree died within a few months. I am not sure if the GA3 was the cause but it seems to be. I don't want to risk killing more mango trees for an experiment. So heed Oscar's advice and don't go spraying GA3 with reckless abandon...

Good advice! I am staying away from it hehe :P. Will get the fish hydrastat though!

3475
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Foliar Feeding
« on: February 07, 2012, 06:00:45 PM »
May just try it for germination of hard to sprout seeds, foliar application sounds to complex and has to do a lot with timing of the flowering, vegetative growth, and a number of other things. Seems like foliar use is mainly with commercial grapes.

GA3 sounded very interesting (due to the claims out there about incredible growth rates etc.). But in practicality it may be better off not trying it at all besides germination.

Thanks for the input Oscar, do you use it for germination at all? (looks like you do from reading the other thread on GA3 germination)

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