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Tropical Fruit Buy, Sell & Trade / Re: selling/trading mary ln white sapote from Marklee
« on: February 05, 2023, 09:13:31 PM »
All gone. Thank you!
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thesimsdude post made me worried- and the darker spots under the parafilm referenced earlier was beginning to spread to I unwrapped and it looks like some mold may have taken rootElouicious,
So what to do? cut it off? I am a bit hesitant because there is nodes pushing on this branch- that said there are other healthy branches pushing too.
I also have this product called Cavicide- which is approved by the EPAQuoteCaviCide is a hospital-grade, ready-to-use multipurpose disinfectant and cleanser, and it is approved by the EPA.
and is an incredibly effective broad treatment that I could dab on the affected area-QuoteThis broad-spectrum intermediate-level surface disinfectant has the power to kill tuberculosis, viruses, fungi, and bacteria within minutes.
I have unwrapped the affected areas to drop the RH in the immediate
UH OH GUYS, I see a weird type of infection on some of the trees I’ve never seen before, looks like fungus or spores growing all through the buddy tape on a few trees, take a look, I’m going to cut them down to the rootstock and burn themIsn't that just mold? That tree is dead then...Just what happens to dead wood?
So does anyone have a verdict on when to unwrap?I let the buds push through the tape. Tree was fine. Then removed the tape after the sun broke it down many months later. I’m not sure about buddy tape? The buds are meant to grow through too though so should be fine? Any other thoughts?
I have some buds pushing growth now- but no method of humidity control otherwise
I unwrapped here because i was worried about that leaf browning
When you say bulk... how many plants do you need?Local pickup for all 60 how low can you go?
I have 50-60 stocky yearlings in 4-inch pots.
Packaging, Shipping costs and general logistics for a large quantity of delicate plants is the real challenge.
Kevin
Thank you! I let it go between 40-45 sometimes even lower. Seems counterintuitive, but as long as it's above freezing, it's ok to get cold temps (I know people who keep theirs at 55 out of fear the plants will die) This year it may have gone below that when it was super cold (maybe 35?). Other than that, not much. Normally they bloom later. I don't know what's happening. The mallika panicles are only 2 on the tree right now, and are just early ones. I suspect the main bulk will pop in a month or so. Still pretty early though. I guess downside is there are no bees, but not worried at all. Plenty of ants and others going around. I've never seen bees on mango flowers.Thank you! The same to you also. Mango is such a good fruit I regret not buying more when I first started of collecting. Oh well, that just means getting more trees now!
Thanks SO much for posting those pictures Jabo!! Kudos to you for having such great success growing them in TN, you deserve a huge pat on the back! Just amazing, and your hard work is paying off... Best of luck and may you have many mangoes to eat this year
Jaboticaba45: Your mango trees look amazing. And doubly impressive that they are flowering already. How warm do you keep the greenhouse in winter to get bloom this early?
Thank you! The same to you also. Mango is such a good fruit I regret not buying more when I first started of collecting. Oh well, that just means getting more trees now!
Thanks SO much for posting those pictures Jabo!! Kudos to you for having such great success growing them in TN, you deserve a huge pat on the back! Just amazing, and your hard work is paying off... Best of luck and may you have many mangoes to eat this year
Jabo's in Tn not Fl mind you. Jabo, do you guys get anthracnose & pm like we do? Just asking.Hi Ed,
Ed
Jabo, your trees look flawless, what’s your secret?Thank you! Not really a secret, but they just seem to grow for me. I did struggle with anthracnose or something and maybe sooty mold, but spraying with neem oil and copper fungicide cleaned things up. The trees pictured are in ground or in rootmaker pots that are bottomless so they are growing directly into my native soil which is part clay. Seems to be doing fine. It must be those turpentine rootstocks carrying them LOL.
Does anybody care to comment on how much light is too little. I have kept might is very low light since I got them. Could this be a problem?No leaves so it's not like it can get energy or anything. Just don't keep in the dark and you'll be fine. Mine are in greenhouse so they are getting decent sun for a few hours. Slowly acclimate to full sun once they start to grow.
I know breadfruit trees can get huge, but are they capable of fruiting at a small size? I never tried because I only like fresh eating fruits, but I wouldn't count it out based on climate alone if you have a greenhouse. I don't know much about breadfruit specifically but all the other artocarpus have been surprisingly easy to grow (so far)Probably not lol. Neither marang and the other artocarpus. Jackfruit and chempejack (hypothetically) could be done as we've seen with Tropical Fruit Hunters. I got rid of mine though it's not worth my space for a few jackfruits a year. I'd be surprised if you could fruit chempedak. If you do, that's a huge feat. I have a friend in FL with greenhouses with marang and pedalai and his haven't fruited yet and they're hitting the roof of his 20ft greenhouse. They just get too big. Now we can fruit kwai muk and lakoocha easy though. Just am waiting for my trees to grow more.
I agree...you and other people made me think of mango season today and I realized how much I am craving a good sweet tart or lemon zest. Only got another 5-6 months left to wait!I told you. Jackfruit is also pigs food, compared to mango.SEMI FINALS!!! For all you durian lovers jackfruit is still in the race! I think overall, these are some great final contestants
Jackfruit should never be used in the same sentence as durian, jackfruit is pigs food compared to durian.
Same here LOL. If mine grow it'll either be biqi or wusu. All my males were seedlings. In the end it doesn't matter seedling or grafted, but seedling trees could be 50/50 chance for male so its a waiting game or DNA test time.Are any of your males grafted? See a graft line?
you made me hop out of my desk chair and go check mine. Looks like 5 or 6 varieties of female trees will make it but not the male. Very happy and thanks for all those doling out advice
I’ve got about 15 or so males, don’t see any buds yet but definitely still alive, if any live I can help share scions
I believe a few are, hard to tell because more than half the labels of my trees fell off in transit and it’s a guessing game on most of themthat said, I have a few that are grafted and labeled as male. I hope they make it.