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Messages - pagnr

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1
Temperate Fruit Discussion / Re: Chilean Nut trees - Gevuina Avellana
« on: June 03, 2023, 04:24:19 PM »
Geuvina is in the Proteaceae family, and in the group with Macadamia.
You could investigate Macadamia growing problems, or Proteacea problems and the solutions.

2
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Happy donut day
« on: June 03, 2023, 04:12:43 PM »
Krispy Kreme came to Australia about 10 years ago. It was a big hype at the time. They are sold about 100 km from here, so we sometimes get them if we are going past.
Australia also has food vans selling hot strawberry jam filled donuts. They are flat tennis ball sized, not donut shaped.
( After we closed the Hole in the Ozone Layer, we then closed the Hole in the Donut. ).
Pineapple icing glazed donuts from 7-11 were very popular, especially with pot smokers with the late night munchies.

3
I have tried 3 wild Australian Garcinias. I like G. warrenii,  (sour but a lot less than the Yellow mangosteen.). No others I have tried are much like " The Mangosteen ".

4
Thanks W. that is interesting information. Any more info about what is in the collection ?

5
One of the Australian collections has about 10 different distinct Pummelo varieties, and well over a hundred Orange varieties.
In the Oranges, a good number are Navel Orange varieties ( Late Navels, Limb sports etc ) and a lot are Valencia selections.
In a way " more of the same ".
That leaves less than 50 % unique Orange varieties in the collection.
It would possible to have a very diverse Citrus collection, with lower numbers in the collection.
Or a very large collection with less unique / diverse varieties.
I am sure that many members on this forum have highly diverse and unique Citrus collections, with some varieties not widely known or represented elsewhere.

6
It would certainly be interesting to get the Arboretum list, and which organisation it disconnected with ( or private collection ).
https://tahititourisme.pf/en-pf/activities/points-of-interest/arboretum-papua-keikaha-ua-huka-en-en-pf-3438682/

quote
A tree nursery with different varieties of fruit and forestry trees and a genetic resources conservatory of citrus fruits, including a hundred or so species from Corsica.

Maybe it is part of the Citrus research based in Corsica ?

7

How can this statement be true? The largest collection of Citrus fruit tree's in the world are at an Arboretum on Ua Huka Island , Population 674 , in  the Marquesas Islands? Hmmmmm


https://tahititourisme.pf/en-pf/islands-and-archipelagos/marquesas-islands/ua-huka/


Maybe the 674 people each all have a different Citrus tree ??

8
Yes definitely Juvenile leaves, and long and strap like, as usual for C. australis.
Being in Australia, I have collected and grown some seed from the wild around Brisbane.
Can't say I have had seedlings that look exactly like those in the pics.
Also have a feeling that the leaves should be slightly more pointed than round ended.

9
They do look a little unusual. Are they under strong grow lights that could compact growth/ short nodes ?
Each individual leaf looks a little different to the australis seedlings I have grown before.
I will double check some of my seedlings for leaf shape.
You could try tasting a leaf from the seedling and the seed tree to see if there is any strong difference indicating a hybrid.

10
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDWq7-eP5sE

I don't think Jordan Peterson should be in this section "Tropical Fruit Discussion".
He really should be in the " Temperate Fruit Discussion".
along with all the other nuts.

lmao!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zetS51I0WwU

11
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eDWq7-eP5sE

I don't think Jordan Peterson should be in this section "Tropical Fruit Discussion".
He really should be in the " Temperate Fruit Discussion".
along with all the other nuts.

12

Just out of curiosity, if the OP of this thread had instead posted some pictures of yellowing citrus leaves and asked "is this citrus greening" and the first reply had been somebody saying that citrus greening was a conspiracy theory by Big Mango, and then people here had correctly called them out for being chock full of crap, you wouldn't be calling for the thread to be frozen, would you? Honestly if that were the original exchange, the responses in here would seem kind of tame, eh?

Just because something has unfortunately been politicized, doesn't mean that it isn't extremely relevant to what we're all trying to do here, i.e. grow fruit trees.


We don't have Citrus Greening in Australia  as of yet.
How might it get here ?
We are still importing Citrus fruit from USA. Possibly low risk / zero risk with treatment, but who knows.
Australia exports Citrus to USA in your off season, and imports in our off season. The Gap is not that great. The profits must be bigger.
A few years ago exports of Citrus to USA took a dive. The local industry went into local promotion and begged locals to buy local Citrus fruit.
Funny that they didn't ask that previously when they could sell their fruit overseas ??
Citrus canker got into the Darwin area some years back. Suspected by contaminated tools from farm workers who came in from overseas farms.
Another outbreak linked to illegally imported budwood used to start a major orchard in QLD.

Not a "conspiracy theory" as such  but the global movement of produce and workers is linked to the economic forces that further contribute to Climate Change,
above that of each persons individual consumption of goods and services and contribution to the atmosphere.
This was clearly illustrated during Covid, when supply chains went to near breaking point. Goods could not easily be moved interstate.
Another interesting case was here was when a disgruntled worker put sewing pins into punnets of strawberries. ( ps this is a strange case, want really happened is murky).
Basically the whole supply of Strawberries in Australia was shut down because they all come from 1 or 2 large farms in QLD, and trucked Australia wide.
A similar case with Canteloupe melons, Blueberries etc. Totally shut down due to contamination issues on one or two farms.
Local small scale producers of fruit and vegetables cannot often supply their local supermarkets.
It is well known that fresh grapes from this area, travel to Melbourne for supply/logistic reasons, then travel back to our shelves.
If tackling Climate Change addresses some of these issues, it will be a good thing.

13
Is anyone seeing a lot of (or more than in the past) water accumulation in your neighborhood?  My street never had this issue before, I specifically bought a house that wasn't in a flood zone, but this rainy season is different.  Huge puddles are flooding the streets.  It seems like climate change is here.  Also the cold weather today is strange for this time of year.

Julie, if having puddles in Miami means climate change is there, then climate change isn't 350 miles away in St pete, where there are piles of dry sand that's been blown freely by the wind because we have almost no rain at all. What used to be our lawns is now a crunchy mass of dead matter that sounds like you're walking across corn flakes.  ;D

That is Climate Change, the two events are linked.
The rain and weather patterns change or shift in time or geography, or the drought / rain cycle frequency changes.
Last Year was a very wet year here in Australia, this year it is already much drier, little rain.
Also the rain pattern here has move from winter rain to summer rain, similar to further north.
Disaster for grape and stone fruit farmers, with increased fungi and moulds.

14
Citrus General Discussion / Re: USDA says silicon helps citrus
« on: May 26, 2023, 06:18:53 PM »
I have not understood how silica (like what composes a chemist's inert glass flask) can also be bioavailable such that plants like horsetail incorporate it in their tissues.

How about Fe Iron. It is used to make steel, but is also a component of our blood.
Most of the other minerals in our body also exist as solid rock minerals.
Calcium ends up in bones and shells, but also in other forms in the body.
Glass is inert for our perceivable time frames ? ( eye frames if you wear glasses ?? )
I have heard that a glass bottle is actually melting as you hold it, just takes millions of years to do so.
( Except if you are in a Kombi Van with a bunch of Hippies, they can sometimes see the bottle melting. )

15
Citrus General Discussion / Re: Breeding citrus what affects things
« on: May 26, 2023, 04:19:26 PM »
It was what I needed, thank you very much!

Thanks for that betsyjolas.

Please also see Walts expansion of the info in his post above.
Pagnr gave a lot of useful information.  I want to add a bit more.
He gave an example of a triploid hybrid with A, B, and C sets of chromosomes.  And he treated them as if each set stayed together.  In fact each set has 9 chromosomes  A1, A2, A3, etc.  B1, B2, B3, etc.  and the same for set C.
A1, B1, and C1 chromosomes are similar having evolved from an origional ancester X with chromosomes X1, X2, X3, etc.
A1, B1, and C1 are still enough alike that one can replace another and still be viable.  But they will be different enough that some, about 1/9, of the traits, will be from the the species that donated that chromosome.  So any pollen grain should have a 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. 8, and 9 but not always from the same species.  One might be A1 B2 C3 A4, B5 C6, A7, A8, B9. o any other combination having one chromosome of each number.  A few of the combinations might not be able to survive, but most will.  A few will be what you had hoped for, or at least a step in the direction.  Most are rejects.

Now another complicacation.  A1, B1, and C1 chromosomes don't stay as they were when you started.  During the formation of pollen and egg cells crossover happen.  I don't know how often they happen in citrus but the crops I have worked usually have about 2 per chromosome per generation.

chromosome from one species has genes
ABCDEFGHIJKL

chromosome from a different species has genes
abcdefghijkl

after a crossover you have
ABCDefghIJKL
abcdEFGHijkl

This exchange usually happens on each chromosome pair per generation, in a different location each time.  So the deck slowly gets shuffled/



16
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Big problem with bees
« on: May 26, 2023, 04:00:52 PM »
Went to use the Weber kettle BBQ and discovered a huge hive of bees taking up 80% of the space between grill and cover.

Any ideas on how to deal with it????

Dan

Weber has a solid warranty.  ;D


I think you could sell that " retired bbq / bee hive " to some Vegetarians.
As a vegetarian myself, I find it amusing.

17
It might be useful to present the info in various ways, like increasing cold hardiness, as well as % zygotic seed in different tables ( or a search criteria ).

18
Citrus General Discussion / Re: USDA says silicon helps citrus
« on: May 26, 2023, 04:24:09 AM »
Is this in response to Greening / HLB ??
Interesting how this is now accepted and promoted by mainstream Ag.
20 years ago this would have been a fringe kook idea.
Silicon is an essential plant nutrient, not often present or accounted for in many fertilisers.
It has been well recognised in many alternative / organic agriculture circles.

19
Wondering if anyone can ID this Australian Nutbush ?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dkzllccJ0Sw

20
I'm thinking of creating an aerocloner.

I do not have the rootstock to graft all the varieties I want and frankly I'm nervous of grafting as I've never done it.

I don't do much grafting. I mainly do chip budding and t budding which are much simpler.
I have also used grafting machines, and found them quite useful.
They are relatively inexpensive on Ali Express. Along with budding knives and tape.
You still need some skill in working out where to make the cuts and using the budding tape.
That comes with practice. You need to get your eye in,  as they say and that only comes with repeated attempts.
Same with using the tape, after a while it becomes automatic.
Things are much simpler since Buddy Tape and Para Film ( nursery type ) came along.
I suggest growing out some Citrus seed like lemon or valencia orange or tangelo, and practice on them.
You can just graft a scion from each seedling back to itself for practice. Or cut a bud stick from one seedling etc.

21
Cold Hardy Citrus / Re: Good resource for grafting?
« on: May 23, 2023, 04:29:09 AM »
The Grafter's Handbook by R J Garner, who was also an author of The Propagation of Tropical Fruit Trees.
More crop specific but lots of detailed grafting drawings etc.
Many other Horticulture textbooks also have sections on grafting. Worth going to an Ag College Library to browse.
Sometimes the diagrams in some will make it much clearer than those in others.

22
Interesting thread. I am in a Citrus and grapevine growing area with hot summers.
The established Citrus groves are much more shady than the rows of grapevines.
Citrus trees would be self shading when older, and parts or sides of the tree would be more or less heavily shaded as the sun moves over the day.
A few people have put full shade covers over Citrus groves, probably 20% shade weave also for hail protection and wind protection.

Overall, I would say morning sun, afternoon shade, more so in hotter climates.

23
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Pumice Alternatives SoCal
« on: May 20, 2023, 01:50:00 AM »
I can't even find large quantities for sale in PHX. A local nursery near me sells it at $10 a 5gallon bucket but they seem to be out. Probably going to have to special order large quantities through my local hydroponics shop

Do you not have larger bulk gravel, sand and landscaping suppliers in the area, ie gravel driveways and front lawn alternatives ?

24
Citrus Buy, Sell, & Trade / Re: Wanted: Shikuwasa in CA
« on: May 19, 2023, 10:15:37 PM »
It's on CCPP list to be released soon. Then you can order budwood.

For someone not familiar with budding / grafting Citrus, does that mean trees will be available for purchase from registered sources soon after the budwood release ??

25
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Pumice Alternatives SoCal
« on: May 19, 2023, 08:39:07 PM »
Any inert rock minerals with the same particle sizes will do the same thing.
Perlite floats to the surface with watering.
Pumice is very light, floats less and will lessen the weight of pots or density of garden beds.
Some people even use expanded styrofoam beads, ie from before compression to styro boxes, or bean bag pellets. These float out on the surface.
Aquarium gravel is similar particle sizes to pumice and as inert and non toxic. Zeolite has positive benefits in cycling nutrients.
Granite and Basalt gravels can contribute useful minerals.
Charcoal is similar density to pumice, but may be alkaline, affecting pH at high rates. Maybe ok in acid soils.
Fired clay beads or bits are also a possibility.
Graded pine bark, say 5mm to 10 mm is also in the particle size range.
Any gravels that contribute excess minerals ( ie limestone, high in Calcium Magnesium, raises pH ), or other Volcanics high in Zinc, Manganese etc might be avoided.

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