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Tropical Fruit Buy, Sell & Trade / Re: Is Radiance Seeds Good?
« on: Today at 10:49:19 AM »
I ordered some cacti seeds which all had great germination rates. I also believe Adam with FFFF ordered successfully from them recently.
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If you have any extra i would love if you could ship one or two to me ill pay shipping and however much money you would want for them. ( the stenocereus queretaroensis )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'm really good at killing Yangmei, but definitely interested in the group order.
I am a literal yangmei assassin at this point. Never had one survive long term.
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.
Anyone have Quinmi #9 cuttings for sale?
Doesn't look like a cocktail grapefruit to me. It seems to have a navel on the bottom of the fruits. Can you take a photo of the fruit looking from the bottom angle. If the fruits have navel, then most likely it will be one of the navel oranges. Also, the fruit flesh would be much more orange color than a cocktail grapefruit.
It could be a seedling tree?
My two favorite mangoes this year (2024) have been Sweet Tart and Coconut Cream.
A perfectly ripe Sweet Tart mango with it’s orange flesh will be a remarkable experience for those that have never had one at peak flavor. Just finished eating a stunningly good Coconut Cream a few minutes ago. What a treat. Looking forward to the next one soon.
Johnny
Oh dude, that’s a damn shame. Such a unique, beautiful property. Hopefully you find your own land to really spread your wings. Would love to pop by there one more time, say hello, and see if I can give a few plants a good home. How much longer do you have exactly?
I am thinking about another fruit get together / plant sale. Would be great to have people enjoy it before it’s gone.
There are a few outcomes that will determine my time left:
1 neighbor buys it and lets me keep renting. I would still plan to leave, but in months or maybe even a year, depending on how that all works out. I do not like or trust the guy.
2. Someone buys it and lets me keep renting, but at much higher rent, months before I’d go.
3. Someone buys it and I’m evicted, 90 days max after closing. I kind of need to prepare for the is scenario, honestly.
Hello!
My first mango (Maha Chanok) has been growing happily for a few months now and even had a really nice vegetative flush (pictured). I was excited to see the other branches flushing as well especially when one of them "popped" and I could see the new baby leaves!
However the new leaves on the second flush haven't really grown or changed at all in ~2 weeks. Is this to be expected? Anything to do? The successful flush grew quite steadily and rapidly.
Thank you!
-- Over-worried mango papa
PS: I am in SoCal 10b and our weather is slightly cooling off.
Wow she has a lot of info. I will definitely binge her videosCan't you just cut the root off?
I don't know. It seems like a large major root. Perhaps it would be best to do it early spring as it is waking up?
Cherimoya Queen on YouTube has several videos of doing just that. She had the same issue, cut it off and it will be fine
Keep us all updated!
Wow she has a lot of info. I will definitely binge her videosCan't you just cut the root off?
I don't know. It seems like a large major root. Perhaps it would be best to do it early spring as it is waking up?
Cherimoya Queen on YouTube has several videos of doing just that. She had the same issue, cut it off and it will be fine
Can't you just cut the root off?
No good.
Grow another.
Darcizzle, your advice about shade is very helpful! Thank you! That's one of the things I've been wondering about. My summers are hot, dry, and high in UV, so most plants want a lot of shade here. I've decided this is an invitation to plant more apples, sunchokes, and squashes to shade everything else (since those species don't mind our intense full sun, ha ha ha).
I didn't realize miracle fruit bushes want acidic soil. That's incredibly helpful to know! It sounds like I should amend the spot where I plan to keep them in-ground (next to the rain tank inside my greenhouse) with a lot of extra acidifying stuff. It also sounds like it may be a good idea to plant some giant bush squashes on the south side of them before our summer heat starts, so they'll be surrounded by gigantic leaves to shade them all summer.
Will miracle fruit bushes want shade in winter, as well? Or should I let them get all the winter sun they can?