Saturday, June 25, 2016

Nom-acado and Mo'

Today was a plant trade day. I picked up a bunch of large plants for which I barely have space.
  • Plinia edulis (Cambuca)
  • Eugenia luschnathiana (Pitomba)
  • Moris alba (White Mulberry), Persian, and Pakistani - grafted Mulberry
  • Pouteria hypoglauca (Cinnamon apple)
  • Persea americana (Red Russell Avocado)
  • Persea americana (Greene Russell Avocado)
In addition to these last two avocados. I recently came to possess 9 Nabal avocados. They're legendary for their size and richness, but I have yet to taste them. They're ripening right now, and you know I will plant them afterword.


Nom-acado and Mo'

Today was a plant trade day. I picked up a bunch of large plants for which I barely have space.
  • Plinia edulis (Cambuca)
  • Eugenia luschnathiana (Pitomba)
  • Moris alba (White Mulberry), Persian, and Pakistani - grafted Mulberry
  • Pouteria hypoglauca (Cinnamon apple)
  • Persea americana (Red Russell Avocado)
  • Persea americana (Greene Russell Avocado)
In addition to these last two avocados. I recently came to possess 9 Nabal avocados. They're legendary for their size and richness, but I have yet to taste them. They're ripening right now, and you know I will plant them afterword.


Saturday, June 4, 2016

Exotic (Expensive) Experiments

I posted awhile back about all the unusual seeds and plants that I was getting. Here's what I have in plant form. I shouldn't count my seeds before they germinate. I purchased a couple of Abiu from Puerto Rico and they're really bushy and about 2 feet tall. I really like them, and I hope to just hold on to them and the Pulasan while I'm in this house, because they probably can't survive in their pots outside. The black sapote do really well here, so let's see what those can do in time. The Eugenia are really skinny, and I have no idea what to expect from them. And the achacha is one of the few garcinia that I'll be trying to collect. It should do fine here.
  • Pouteria caimito (Abiu)
  • Diospyros nigra (Black Sapote)
  • Synsepalum dulcificum (Miracle Fruit)
  • Eugenia selloi (Pitangatuba)
  • Eugenia candolleana (Rainforest Plum)
  • Eugenia uniflora x E. selloi (Pintangatuba)
  • Nephelium mutabile (Pulasan)
  • Garcinia humilis (Achacha)

Anona-mess

The first time I had anything from the genus Anona was in Bali. There I tasted a soursop (A. muricata) and it was delicious. Something like a creamy green apple flavor, but the flesh was really fibrous and it was somewhat hard to eat because of it. Since then, back in California, I've had a few chermoyas (A. chermimola), and they are even better. The flesh of the fruit is more consistent, and the only annoying part is the large seeds (which are ill advised to swallow). Still, I could eat many of them because the taste is so great. How have I not eaten these before moving to CA? Avocados don't grow in other parts of the country, yet you can find those in grocery stores everywhere. Maybe it's only a matter of time for cherimoyas.

Well, now I'm the owner of a few Anona plants, the grafted ones are flowering which of course bring the possibility of fruit. But, these aren't just cherimoyas, these are mostly atemoyas (A. chermola x A. squamosa aka Sugar Apple) and they're said to be even better. To the point where cherimoyas taste bad in comparison! The flowers are hermaphroditic; female in the morning and male in the evening. After the first one bloomed, I collected and pollen and stored it in the fridge for the next flower. Here's hoping it's still good when the next flower opens!

Here's my inventory:

  • A. cherimola x A. squamosa; Atemoya 'Bradley' - grafted
  • A. diversifolia (Ilama) 'Rosada' - grafted
  • A. squamosa (Sugar Apple) 'Super Atis' - grafted
  • A. cherimola x A. squamosa; Atemoya 'Island Gem' - grafted
  • A. cherimola x A. squamosa; Atemoya 'Phat Pakchong' aka 'PPC' - grafted
  • A. cherimola x A. squamosa; Atemoya 'Randhir' - grafted
  • A. cherimola x A. cherimola
  • A. diversifolia (Ilama) x (A. cherimola x A. squamosa; Atemoya)

Banana Fanna Foe Fanna

I recently acquired a few Musa cultivars. I've never grown bananas, but they're giant herbs so how hard can it be. I have a pair of each of the following:
  • M. 'Thousand Fingers'
  • M. 'Gros Michel'
  • M. 'Dwarf Iholena'
They're little ones, but they seem to be growing already just after potting them, so who knows what they'll turn in to and how fast they'll do it. I think I'll be up potting in no time.

Then I picked up one more that is quite large, and it's a dwarf variety. I don't know what it is, but it's a Thai cultivar.


P. Update

With Memorial Day behind me, it's time for a Passiflora update. Things aren't as magnificent as they have been in years past. Partly because I had to defoliate in order to build the new pergola - a necessary evil. Partly because I've lost many species/hybrids to the last winter during which it seemed the sun would never return. Fortunately, anything that has survived this long, should continue to survive for at least the summer and fall. Here's the inventory:

Large Containers:
  • P. holosericea 
  • P. × belotii (P. alata x P. caerulea) 
  • P. 'Manta' (P. xiikzodz × P. coriacea) 
  • P. racemosa 'buzios' 
  • P. caerulea 
  • P. malacophylla 
  • P. pittieri 
  • P. 'Blue-Eyed Susan' (incarnata × edulis) × (incarnata × cincinnata) 
  • P. parritae 
  • P. actinia

                            In the Ground:
                            • P. edulis 'flavicarpa' 
                            • P. caerulea 'Constance Eliot' x P. loefgrenii 'Iporanga'
                            • P. tarminiana 'Bailadores'
                            • P. quadrangularis
                            • P. tarapotina "C"
                            • P. manicata
                            • P. pinnatastipulata
                            • P. mucronata 

                              Small Pots and Greenhouse Plants:
                              • P. discophora 
                              • P. poryphretica var. angustata 
                              • P. 'Blue-Eyed Susan' (incarnata × edulis) × (incarnata × cincinnata) 
                              • P. ornithura 
                              • P. malacophylla 
                              • P. macrophylla 
                              • P. sublanceolata 
                              • P. ovalis 
                              • P. edulis x ? 
                              • P. laurifolia
                              • P. lingularis
                              • P. mollisima
                              • P. 'Blue Bouquet' 
                              • P. racemosa 'buzios' x ?
                              • P. malacophylla x ?
                              • P. gritensis
                              • P. morifolia
                              Planted at a Friend's
                              • P. macrocarpa 
                              • P. edulis (Orange Fruit)
                              • P. caerulea
                              On the Way
                              • P. 'Kew Gardens' 
                              On the Way
                              • P. macrocarpa