Author Topic: Noble Juicy Crunch Tangerine  (Read 8880 times)

grant5185

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Re: Noble Juicy Crunch Tangerine
« Reply #25 on: May 17, 2024, 08:57:49 AM »
I tried these from Publix earlier this year and found a seed in one.   I threw it in a cup of potting mix and it’s 3” tall now.    Maybe I’ll graft some of its budwood to a larger rootstock.   Anyone tried that?

Galatians522

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Re: Noble Juicy Crunch Tangerine
« Reply #26 on: May 17, 2024, 07:08:28 PM »
I am pretty sure they are monoembryonic. So, you won't get a Juicy Crunch. You might get something else good, though.  :D

grant5185

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Re: Noble Juicy Crunch Tangerine
« Reply #27 on: May 17, 2024, 09:15:17 PM »
Like a box of chocolates lol.   :D

Rmck22

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Re: Noble Juicy Crunch Tangerine
« Reply #28 on: May 18, 2024, 10:52:41 PM »

Florida-grown.  Our citrus industry needs this shot in the arm.  Let's save agriculture from subdivisions!
Florida citrus is a disaster because of our cultural practices, mainly chemical farming.. nothing to do with subdivisions. if anything the growth in subdivisions has increased farmer's land values giving them access to additional equity and cash through refinancing.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CB9Cmv1xDVg



That is a very over simplified way to put it. While yes the over all soil health is not what it should be the industry is 100 percent suffering purely from hlb. As is everywhere In the world has a large amount of acp. Central and south Florida grows them like weeds. Refinancing is helping zero when you have developers offering 50 k an acre no one will refinance to continue loosing money.