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Tropical Fruit Discussion / Re: Vanilla pompona from seed?
« on: Today at 08:55:20 AM »
I'm about 80-90% sure the one from our forest is hostmannii. Just awaiting confirmation from the author of the book I linked to earlier.
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BTW, what is the avg. annual rainfall at your farm? Elevation? Does planifolia yield well under those conditions? Just learned from an orchid grower today that pompona is more shade-tolerant than planifolia.
Average rainfall is variable from very low of 85” to a high of more than 200”. It probably averages at about 120”. We are just above sea level.
It took us about 8 years to become a profitable farm. I have a construction background and I did some contracting, electric, pump installations, stuff like that.
You really need to have a good idea of the market to be successful. Not everything will work. Between the challenges of production and the issues of selling a lot can go wrong. What has worked the best for me really are the fruit trees like mangosteen and durian. Many things have come together but I’ve been at this since 1987. The last twelve years or so we’ve been making chocolate bars and this has worked out for us.
But vanilla has potential for us since we have a farmers market. Juice and kombucha producers buy vanilla as well in small quantities. I’m able to get $4 a bean. I’m over diversified but that’s more fun. I’m 74 and this is all my passion. I’ll never retire! Also, huge plus, my son is really into all this stuff so the project is multigenerational.
Another flower bud from Flower 1's cutting opened a day later, even though it was a day after the cutting was taken.
Flower 3 and 4 - Harvested from one vine growing in very close proximity to the vines of flowers 1 and 2. For all I know these could all be the same plant, because they travel along the forest floor until they find a suitable tree. The part along the ground could have broken off and decomposed long ago.
Foliage of the vine of flowers 3/4
A lot of interesting stuff here and parallels. I’ve read about fermenting vanilla and tried with some wild v. palmarum without much success. Seems like a nightmare. In Brazil we have a severe labor shortage so it’s off the table. One thing I’ve learned and tried is basically gathering wild vanilla that splits or is sub optimal, lazily semi fermenting it and drying it and then creating extract in alcohol. It worked well for personal use!
Here I’m seeing people planting on cacao trees supposedly without messing with the cacao.
Pamplona has a supply chain and high price, but hand pollination increases productivity drastically and that with fermentation seems super laborious. Most of the other species have never been tested even for culinary appeal. Embrapa (Brazilian usda) is doing some preliminary tests. We’ve found vanilla palmarum, phaentha, and cribbiana here and lots others unidentified.
In Costa Rica you find enough workers I take it and ones who don’t trash the plants? Id love to ferment vanilla if I could find a way to make it work.
What you have in the fotos doesn’t look that much like pompona.
I’m wondering if the vanilla that occurs there, pompona or not, has been cultivated traditionally or is it an activity that is more recent.
Peter
We have loads of rangpur lime and can’t sell it! No one seems interested except every person in the cities struggling to find it.
Agroventuresperu come visit anytime. We have space. I’d love to visit as well but we’re prisoners on the farm with animals and the year round harvests.
Glytcidia sepium is what I’m speaking of. It’s called madre cacao in southern Mexico. I see it all over the world as it’s so useful. Native to southern Mexico and Central America.
We have at least 5 different erythrina here. They have nice flowers and one type is used widely for shading coffee in CR. A different one is used for posts.
You never said who buys the pampona and for what? And how much do they pay!
Peter
That makes sense and I have the same problem. We’ve found some 5 species so far and only 1 has been identified with certainty. Like anything else in agriculture if you don’t know how to sell it it’s a big risk. That said there seems to be a market for wild vanillas but who knows if you can access it, whether the winds shift in a few years etc.
Wow I thought it was mostly the welfare system here in Brazil unfortunately post pandemic but makes sense it’s a broader trend. Off topic but we ended up getting a remote controlled mower from China but didn’t speed things up much because it’s small and gets hung up on uneven ground. A bigger one and more powerful would probably work but we’re looking at either just redoing everything for tractors (and just planting timber on slopes) or giving up all together. Hard to do agriculture if there’s no one willing to do the work!
Besides glyrcidium I also like appropriate erythrina. It’s another nitrogen fixer that can be established by sticking a stick in the ground.
Also, what I saw in Mexico is using citrus. Lime or orange have clean trunks, give some shade and, unlike cacao, the fruit is borne more terminally on the branches so the fruits don’t get in the way of each other. Limes is a good crop for small scale farming. Bars will buy hundreds of them.
Peter
I had done some reading into soil science but it felt like a dead end for me personally because:
- the regional soil maps show huge variations in soil types even within a single town, and that is just the "pre-humanity" soil. The soil my actual house was built on has been majorly graded and could have been imported. This might not apply to everyone. I guess I could have it tested.
- it gets math heavy, I don't have a chemistry background
- there seems to be little consensus about what is best. Till vs no-till. Organic vs conventional. Some of the books I've read are more religious dogma than science. I would be interested in recent, peer reviewed books if you have any recommendations. Theres a huge variance in container soil recommendations, too.
Basically the only consensus I have found is that nearly every plant prefers "moist, free-draining soil, rich in organic matter"
There are some wild vines that flowered recently in our forest. Not sure what species they are, but we took some photos from far below and some folks think they're pompona. I've been reading that the flowers are quite morphologically distint from one locale to the next when it comes to pompona. I've been reading about the genus in Peru, and it's one of those topics where I call into question the taxonomy. Like maybe there's actually different species that haven't been splitted yet or perhaps other species are variable to the extent that they might almost look identical to certain pompona flowers. Maybe it's one of those cases where there's only one PHD in the entire country who could identify a species and say that it's a pompona with a different-looking flower instead of a completely different species.
Yes
Seem to me that your suggestion might damage the roots of tree sapling.
If you do it too violently, sure
if you poke a reasonable amount of holes with a blunt instrument around the drip line at first and then moving toward the center of the trunk, you will feel any significant roots you run in to. Stop poking when you feel a root
Hi
So yes I am growing vanilla as a business but my model might be kind of unique. I have dabbled in vanilla for more than 30 years. I also grow black pepper commercially as well as several different tropical fruits. Many of those fruits were introduced by us to Costa Rica. As far as I can tell we introduced salak, terap, champedek, and several others. We commercially grow mangosteen and durian. These crops and some others are all successful on a small scale.
Vanilla is a diversification like most of the rest of this stuff. We do t rely on a single crop. When you said you were looking a seed propagation since you envisioned planting 1000 plants I was thinking that’s quite ambitious. I have less than 150 plants.
I also grow cacao and make fine chocolate. I mention the chocolate because a couple of years ago that was a better business than it is now. I try to be versatile, have several irons in the fire. But not too big. If I sold 1kg of vanilla per month I’d be happy along with the other stuff I do.
I dehydrate fruit as well. So, dried fruit, black pepper, and vanilla store well which is a plus over hustling to find buyers for durian that will spoil quickly.
But to get back to vanilla; it is work and we grow it on living fence posts spaced 2m apart. Within 3 years it should flower. The flowers are easy to find and take less than a minute to pollinate. Depending on how much you harvest it shouldn’t take so much time out of your day to attend to the routine of curing the vanilla. It is kind of a big deal but the vanilla is worth a lot of money. I recommend to anyone to start small, take your time, and see how it works out. Twenty to fifty plants is something to start with. Give it a good shot. Don’t cut corners or run cattle with vanilla.
Peter
Yes
Seem to me that your suggestion might damage the roots of tree sapling.
Poking holes in the container? Nah, not if you're careful, I think it's a fine suggestion. And remember, the alternative is potential root rot.
I generally have good soil but am growing about 100 vanilla plants mostly where there is some problem with the soil. They’re basically grown in a mulch medium on top of the soil.
But why grow pampona? Most people grow plenifolia. We are growing mostly a hybrid of plenifolia and pampona that is basically two thirds plenifolia. Pamplona is very niche market. I’d be nervous about that.
The vanilla price is not like pataya. There is an international market price which is always going to affect the local price in a very big way.
We are getting about $4 per bean right now. You say you are too busy with other stuff to have the time to properly cure the vanilla properly. Just what are you doing that it’s not worth it to spend time curing vanilla?
I feel strongly that trying to combine cattle with vanilla is not a very good idea.
Suerte!
Peter
"Why not planifolia?"That's the one being grown everywhere. You have to compete with the likes of Madagascar. Pompona, here, is regarded as being the native Vanilla, and it seems that's the one being promoted in our area. Although we also bought a few cuttings of planifolia.
Yes
But complaining about a ~2 week delay is nothing and needs some perspective over what's going on in the background.