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Messages - Oolie

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1
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Help with rooting mulberries - stage 2
« on: March 30, 2023, 02:32:47 PM »
Rooted Himalayan Red using Hormex, bottom heat 75F, humidity dome, and peatmoss seedling mix. However still getting less then 50% rooting taking.

Have you or  Aiptasia904
or anyone else rooted White shatoot with the hormex or dip n grow?
I've tried and failed on several occasions.

2
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Parrot safe rare fruit
« on: March 30, 2023, 10:52:55 AM »
I bet carrotwood grows like a weed in 9b. It's in the longan family.

3
Tropical Fruit Buy, Sell & Trade / Re: Watermelon Splash Mango
« on: March 27, 2023, 01:55:47 PM »
At this point I think they are playing jokes on us with these names.

I thought the same thing. They did pretty good job with some of the other new names, but watermelon splash just isn't appealing to me as a mango.  Renaming seacrest triple sec bothers me too.
At least it was one they selected.

4
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Variegated mulberry?
« on: March 26, 2023, 12:32:00 AM »
You can mist the leaves with dilute water soluble fertilizer and see if they get darker.

5
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Variegated mulberry?
« on: March 25, 2023, 05:10:37 PM »
Can micronutrient deficiency be ruled out?

6
The number one for me is 36-8, I wanted one for a long time, but when I bought grafted trees, they always died from shipping shock.

Every other tree seems to rebound just fine however, so I'm going with bad luck.

I love the flavor, and ship-ability (thick skin and can ripen well if picked early).

Starch supposedly makes phenomenal rootstock if the scientific literature is to be believed (vigorous and highly productive).

7
I planted pears in a low chill/ high blight pressure area.

After much research I settled on Warren and Potomac for European types, and Dasui Li and Shin Li for Asian types.

Space for more if other interesting ones come up too.

I opted not to plant either Baldwin or Hood for texture reasons.

8
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Amy Mango
« on: March 23, 2023, 09:44:24 AM »
I'm bumping this up because someone out there has to have some more info, and it's going to be at least another year before this one is large enough to fruit.

The sap smell on mine smells like geranium/ camphor.

I'm really curious what flavors come through for people, as I can imagine a pretty interesting result with a sap that smells like this.

For the OP, it came from Gary's project, D-2, Jakarta seedling.

9
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Fruit haul in Da Nang
« on: March 22, 2023, 08:11:08 AM »
I was in Florida a couple weeks ago, and at the Vietnamese market they had several boxes of imported mangoes. Many cultivars were available, but none of the boxes indicated Cat Chu.

I spoke with the purveyor and he indicated Cat Chu is late season and would not be available for some time.

10
The mexicolas are very vigorous trees. Really only a few varieties are suitable to grow in pots. I think Wurtz gets the nod, but really avos like being in the ground.

Fuerte and Bacon can be great if picked ripe, and their seasons do complement Hass well, but for cold hardiness, you should consider mostly Mexican types with seasons Dec-February, ones like Fuerte and Mexicola would be prime contenders.

11
Tropical Fruit Buy, Sell & Trade / Re: Anybody hav3 Leo3 atemoya?
« on: March 20, 2023, 07:55:54 PM »
If the tree is still dormant at the start of April I may have some.

12
Cold Hardy Citrus / Re: Prague Citsuma
« on: March 18, 2023, 12:33:50 AM »
I am looking for this variety, I've heard that it's ugly, but a survivor.

13
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Gopher Gold
« on: March 12, 2023, 10:28:34 PM »
There will be a gaseous carbon reckoning.

14
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Cherimoya bonanza
« on: March 06, 2023, 08:07:50 AM »
Very nice harvest.   I am jealous, I have a large in-ground grafted cherimoya but I have yet to get a single fruit to set.  I flowers a lot and I have been hand-pollinating them when I feel like it but I am lazy and probably not doing it right.  Meanwhile my container atemoya produces fine.  I am thinking of replacing the cherimoya with the atemoya (or topworking various annonas onto it) simply because hand pollinating is a chore. 

I just want to try the fruit first once before I give up on it.
Fruit can vary greatly year to year. I found a tree on a property that was basically sticks (mature tree, but not watered for years), after applying water and fertilizer, it began growing vigorously, and fruiting well. The fruit quality was very poor for 5 years or so, soft, insipid flesh, with flavor that was difficult to appreciate. You could tell the fruit was ripening on the tree much before it was ready (dull skinned).

The last couple years, the fruit has been superb, comparable to Honeyhart, though smaller, it has good flesh/seed ratio, excellent bubblegum type flavor, and thick texture. But you can tell the tree is holding them until they're ready.

Point is it can take a few crops to produce representative fruit.

15
Is cherilata different than Painter and Fernandez?

Hi Pau,

Mine is a darker red almost deep purple. It doesn't look like "Painters" but I don't remember where mine came from. This is the first year it fruited and the fruit aren't ripe yet, so we'll see what the flesh looks like.

It came from me, the scion I received from John Painter.

16
You will have no trouble finding them in Atlanta area. That said, Butias are often painfully slow growers, the age you are searching for could be as small as a #7 pot.

17
Citrus General Discussion / Re: Florida Buyer Beware - Publix Citrus
« on: March 03, 2023, 08:09:46 AM »
I am with 1rainman.  I NEVER use the self checkout on purpose
I prefer self checkout to a scanner/bagger who smashes my fruit.

18
As those are all monoembryonic types, I would plant a rootstock now and graft it with one of those types after it's three years old.

Does it care matching rootstock and scions with mono or poly?

I grafted Kesar and Alphonso on my unknow fruited rootstock; I have been eat Kesar the last few year, and Alphonso last year first time.They both have wonderful aroma but alphonso taste stronger sweeter. I like both. No Keitt for me -- too watery and nothing special.

What matters is the desired varieties to plant are all mono types, and therefore must be grafted to get a true-to-type plant.

You haven't had a Keitt picked at maturity, or a late season Keitt. It's a good one if the correct crop is picked correctly.

19
As those are all monoembryonic types, I would plant a rootstock now and graft it with one of those types after it's three years old.

My Alphonse flowered way too much, and eventually died back to the ground (planted as a number 7 on Turpentine), Keitt is nearly the same, after repeated years of extreme flowering it is nearly back to a stump (planted as a number 15 on Manila).

I haven't planted Kesar yet, but I suspect it will flower similarly, so a rootstock must be fairly well established to continue growing through the 3-4 flowerings a tree will produce each year in socal.

20
In Fl, this cultivar is falling out of favor due to disease susceptibility, poor fruit set, and splitting. Where you are is even hotter and wetter if you're at low altitude, so maybe consider a similar but more hardy variety. The recommendations as far as I've read would be Indian cultivars Imam Pasand, or Alampur Baneshan/ Banganapalli.

If you can find any of these available in your region, you might consider them.

21
Temperate Fruit Buy, Sell, & Trade / Re: ISO prunus mume seeds or plants
« on: February 28, 2023, 06:53:43 PM »
Are you willing to deal with import restrictions?

22
Citrus Buy, Sell, & Trade / Re: WTB: Allspice tangelo fruit.
« on: February 28, 2023, 06:52:11 PM »
I'd be grateful for a CA source who is certified to share material.

23
Seed molding happens a lot when germinating, the weak seeds particularly succumb, as well as those irradiated and refrigerated.
That tree looks pretty crispy, but if you do a bark scrape test, you may be pleasantly surprised. Damage up top usually weakens a mango tree, but damage to the roots usually kills them ded.

24
Does Zills post their new introductions on their Facebook page? Trying to keep my finger on the pulse of the latest mango trends.

They're a wholesale nursery, so your best bet is to search posts on here for info, especially those close to the sources like Har, Rob, and Alex. Usually they are the first to share info on here. You could also try purchasing fruit from the ZHPP fruit stand and you may luck out, or might get something picked at a time which doesn't give a fair representation.

BTW, Alex recently updated many of the pages on the Tropical Acres Farms site, so if you haven't looked there in a while, there's new info, especially into the medium term performance info for stuff grafted 3+ years ago (many of the recent Zill releases).

25
Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Creme Brulee Mango
« on: February 28, 2023, 06:41:18 PM »
Wow, Thank you for the followup Alex.
I'm eager to regraft it, but with moderate-low vigor, and high propensity to flower, it should definitely be on an established rootstock for So-Cal. I think I have at least one more that's hanging on through the gopher onslaught, looks like it may be grafting size later this year or next year if it lives that long.

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