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Messages - nullzero

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1
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Rose Apple problems. Please help?
« on: April 26, 2025, 11:40:47 PM »
Could be nutrient deficiency or bacterial.

2
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Pouteria lucuma
« on: April 26, 2025, 11:30:07 PM »
Maybe I will have cuttings in the future. I cut back my pecan pie grafts for this spring. However may still have more lucuma de Palo (fruiting mature wood in future). I grafted lucuma de seda hoping it takes in the next few weeks.

First year I have had fruit, so I'm trying to plant up all the seeds to use as rootstock. Lucuma is a little better for most of CA as rootstock in my opinion, unless you live inland OC than maybe canistel is better slightly.

3
Any of the superior Taiwanese selections with lower to no seeds.

4
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Help me pick my next tree
« on: April 17, 2025, 05:03:25 AM »
I would say Malay apple, Luc's Garcinia, Rose apple (superior selections), Coconuts (if you can find a selection that handles light frost.

5
Young trees scumbag to winter. I had one in the past in SoCal, died during temps in low 40s extending for weeks. Stem was only pencil thickness.

Keep the plants in a container and warm and dry during cool part of the year. It may survive, however much easier to just grow Atemoya and Cherimoya.

6
wesh channel 2 called this morning and asked to come out!

another, more in depth news story comes out tonight!

I will post a link, I think they said it airs at 5pm tonight...it's available on demand via their website, but i'm not sure if you have to pay to watch, or how it works....I will find a way to download the video and post to my youtube...

thanks for all the support, the meeting is tomorrow night, I think news will probably be there again.

I'm hoping it works out for you, it will suck if they decide to go through with the plan. Maybe will be a good ending with good compensation or they decide not going through with it and your business gets good exposure.

7
Chocolate Fruit (Tocoyena bullata) has performed well for me no issues with cold this winter. It's been left outside entire winter. I'm closer to a zone 10b though I have more costal influence with a little inland heat.

Randia sp. Nova Serra Das Lontras. Left this outside this winter it lost leaves. It might be deciduous. The main stem is now sprouting out new leaf buds. There was no die back of mainstem.

Vasconcellea goudotiana, No die back holding fruit and flowering into the winter.

Eugenia sp. Purple Plum. Outside no dieback handled winter well.

8
That sucks Adam, I hope all goes well in your favor.

9
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Container mixes
« on: March 25, 2025, 10:44:32 PM »
I like coir a lot but it varies with quality. A good buffered coir goes a long way. Can't go wrong with decomposed granite, vermiculite, biochar, and aged goat manure.

I have been testing a mix like 15% coir, 25% peatmoss, 15% vermiculite, 15% perlite, 10% biochar, 10% DG, 10% Goat manure or worm castings.

So far everything loves it, getting great growth for Eugenia, Garcinia, Plinia, and Annonas. Will sprinkle some acidic sulfur soil conditioner sometimes if it's a plant that likes on acidic side.

10
Tropical Fruit Buy, Sell & Trade / Re: WTB female scions of Kei Apple
« on: March 12, 2025, 04:16:35 PM »
I have fruiting trees in San Diego.

Sent a PM, thanks for response

11
Tropical Fruit Buy, Sell & Trade / WTB female scions of Kei Apple
« on: March 07, 2025, 07:28:43 PM »
I am looking for female scions or Kei apple for sale.

Thanks

12
You need a humidity dome with venting for exchange of fresh air. Otherwise dehydration will occur, these plants usually have poor root development.

13
I use decomposed granite mixed in potting soil.

14
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Yangmei (Morella/Myrica rubra) thread
« on: February 25, 2025, 09:30:18 PM »
Probably lost them after the crazy Santa ana event. Corresponds with posting time and not being far off from January. Dehydrated from fast moving dry winds in his location.

Yangmei most likely needs coastal influence and humidity to be happy. Sub 20% humidity and 60mph winds will definately kill a tree.

15
I have a bag of patio plus and a bag of perlite on hand so I’ll probably use them.
Last round I used a big pot so it was a pain to move it around and bottom heating it.
This round I’ll try 4” to 5” pot so I could wrap heating pad around it.

I wouldn't use patio plus, it's somewhat hot with chicken manure.  Try peat moss and coir blend, perlite, vermiculite,  and decomposed granite mix.

16
Eagles 31 Chiefs 24

17
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: What Fruits do you regret not planting?
« on: January 26, 2025, 04:01:16 PM »
Quote
It is a mass thing, with these columnar cactus. I notice they like being about 4 inches in diameter and a few feet tall before I saw any flowering. Slower growing strains probably looking at a decade depending on optimal growing conditions. I believe 7 to 10 years is what to expect.

I got them at a decent size, maybe 2" diameter and 6" tall. They're already 4" diameter in 1 year and some cresting over 1' tall. The in ground ones are really slow, but the ones I put in cactus / potting soil are ripping it up. A few are putting out offshoots already.

Where I moved to now is definitely optimal cactus growing area.

I noticed the same thing, the plants grow faster in containers. I do a mix with decomposed granite, peatmoss, vermiculite, perlite, and clay pebbles. 1ft and 4" in 1 year from seed is super fast. I would expect that after 3 years in SoCal.

18
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: What Fruits do you regret not planting?
« on: January 26, 2025, 01:08:40 AM »
It will be hard to keep the plants with you without a house or renting homes through your moving. If your going to college will be even harder to keep large plants.

I would focus on Jaboticaba,Yangmei, and Stenocereus queretaroensis if I could turn back 10 years. I have been actively growing since 2007 and have lost many plants over time during moves.

I would focus mostly on annuals until you get land, this way you can get harvests and enjoy the hobby. I would try to keep only a couple plants to maturity over time.

As for places the best in mainland US are South Florida or Southern California. Hawaii and Puerto Rico if you don't mind Islands. If it's out of country there are many options which would take time to decide.

I just started a ton of Stenocereus queretaroensis! I have like 150 seedlings that I grew from raindanceseeds. I got the 4 different varieties: red, white, purple, and orange. They are a great company and definitely sent way more than they listed (they said like 25 seeds for $10, in reality it was like 50-100 seeds). I am not sure what to do with all these cacti. I am thinking I will do some guerilla gardeing and plant them around my school I work at. I feel like a gardener/groundskeeper would less likely weedwack a cacti, as they stick out and seem intentional. I've thought about 3D printing out little plant signs with their scientific name to put at the base to make them seem more legit.

I have Stenocereus queretaroensis which I grew from seed of selected fruit I ate. I am on year 6, they are starting to bulk up The best fruit taste like raspberry jam with a dragon fruit syrupy texture.

Glad I got these going. I have a few in ground ones that I just transplanted to my new place, and some in pots that are all looking decent. In ground are looking rough but should come back. How long from seed to flower?

It is a mass thing, with these columnar cactus. I notice they like being about 4 inches in diameter and a few feet tall before I saw any flowering. Slower growing strains probably looking at a decade depending on optimal growing conditions. I believe 7 to 10 years is what to expect.

Optimal growing conditions something like humidity levels around 40% to 70%, full sun, day time temps in the low 90s and nights in the 70-85 range. Diluted bird or bat guano as fertilizer, use a gritty mix with granite and well draining.

19
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: What Fruits do you regret not planting?
« on: January 25, 2025, 03:55:09 PM »
It will be hard to keep the plants with you without a house or renting homes through your moving. If your going to college will be even harder to keep large plants.

I would focus on Jaboticaba,Yangmei, and Stenocereus queretaroensis if I could turn back 10 years. I have been actively growing since 2007 and have lost many plants over time during moves.

I would focus mostly on annuals until you get land, this way you can get harvests and enjoy the hobby. I would try to keep only a couple plants to maturity over time.

As for places the best in mainland US are South Florida or Southern California. Hawaii and Puerto Rico if you don't mind Islands. If it's out of country there are many options which would take time to decide.

I just started a ton of Stenocereus queretaroensis! I have like 150 seedlings that I grew from raindanceseeds. I got the 4 different varieties: red, white, purple, and orange. They are a great company and definitely sent way more than they listed (they said like 25 seeds for $10, in reality it was like 50-100 seeds). I am not sure what to do with all these cacti. I am thinking I will do some guerilla gardeing and plant them around my school I work at. I feel like a gardener/groundskeeper would less likely weedwack a cacti, as they stick out and seem intentional. I've thought about 3D printing out little plant signs with their scientific name to put at the base to make them seem more legit.

I have Stenocereus queretaroensis which I grew from seed of selected fruit I ate. I am on year 6, they are starting to bulk up The best fruit taste like raspberry jam with a dragon fruit syrupy texture.

20
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: What Fruits do you regret not planting?
« on: January 24, 2025, 12:25:01 PM »
It will be hard to keep the plants with you without a house or renting homes through your moving. If your going to college will be even harder to keep large plants.

I would focus on Jaboticaba,Yangmei, and Stenocereus queretaroensis if I could turn back 10 years. I have been actively growing since 2007 and have lost many plants over time during moves.

I would focus mostly on annuals until you get land, this way you can get harvests and enjoy the hobby. I would try to keep only a couple plants to maturity over time.

As for places the best in mainland US are South Florida or Southern California. Hawaii and Puerto Rico if you don't mind Islands. If it's out of country there are many options which would take time to decide.

21
A try some trees again if the order is going through.

22
Tropical Fruit Buy, Sell & Trade / Re: SCIONS!!
« on: January 21, 2025, 03:27:09 PM »
I would be interested in some annona scions, but I am only grafting chill hours type fruits right now. If still available last week of February, I would be interested.

23
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: H N Y!
« on: December 31, 2024, 02:11:56 AM »
Happy New Years and a vigorous and productive new year especially for plants.

24
Turkmenistan selections should handle the cold a little better. I would try Parfianka and Desertnyi.

25
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Black Sapote Flavor Test (Lara Farms)
« on: December 13, 2024, 08:14:33 PM »
Anyone tastes Matt's Giant? I have 3 seedlings that are starting to size up, I am still probably about 4 years from fruit. But wanted to know if the fruit was excellent quality?

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