Thursday, February 11, 2010

Fairchild mango















Fairchild Mango growing in Florida sand - err I mean soil.

I can hardly believe it, but my newly planted (December) little 4 foot tall Fairchild mango, is having a growth spurt and its sporting a flower raceme on one of those growths ! I never even anticipated it bearing right after planting it and at such a small size even though is a dwarf or condo mango! I probably will have to remove the fruit because the little tree is not mature enough to hold fruit.

Even more worrisome, since it so small,l how will I keep the raccoons and other animals at bay ! Maybe time for some electric fencing !

11 comments:

  1. Congrats! That is way cool. Maybe you'll be able to prop up the little mango so it can ripen. Keep us posted.

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  2. I'm in SE FL also, on the Treasure Coast. I planted my mango 1-1/2 years ago. It produced fruit last year, but the 3 that "survived" fell of prematurely. It's looking great this year and blooming like crazy! I feel your excitement..hope I have fruit this year! And I hope you do too! Good luck!

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  3. Well that's a great problem to have! That's a pretty big for a 3 1/2 month plant. That means I should see the same thing in two months. ;-)

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  4. Its a grafted nursery-grown tree - I'm lucky to find new varieties at my local Home Depot every now and then (I should have bought the mallika mango when I had the chance), so its probably over 3 years old. If yours is seed-grown, it can take from 5-12 years to fruit.

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  5. Oh...

    **looks longingly at the horizon...**

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  6. Lets hope yours is a 5 (or even less) year seedling :)

    I'll be experimenting with grafting this spring - I have about 7 seedling mango's all ready to be grafted.

    I plan on grafting a fairchild, lancetilla, valencia pride and my neighbour's hatcher mangos - these are from a local place called HATCHER MANGO HILL, seriously, its the closest thing to a hill in South Florida, and yes, its covered in mango trees.

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  7. Seriously, I can't even tell one variety from another. I just notice if the fruit is sweet or not. Do blog about your grafting adventures!

    I've experimented with grafting too. I just don't know if it worked. I'm still waiting for new shoots on the grafted stem.

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  8. The varieties differ tremendously. For example, the lancetilla mango is very spicy, for some almost objectionable. The store bought mangos don't come close to tree-ripened ones.

    Then you have the fibrous varieties, the Haitian mangoes are quite fibrous compared to the Florida varieties for example.

    I grafted some of my neighbours Hatcher and some of my own lancetilla mangos onto 8 month old rootstock last weekend, now its wait and see.

    I experimented with grating when I was about 15 years old - we had some wild peach trees growing in our garden, I grafted some yellow clingstone peaches onto it using t-bud grafting. Of my 5 or so grafts, one did start to grow, unfortunately we moved before it could start to produce.

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  9. I think my own grafting experiment failed. After a couple of promising weeks because the stalk remained green, it's now turning brown. I'll have to try again I guess.

    I've never heard of a spicy mango. So the Lantecilla is both sour and spicy (when raw)?

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  10. Maybe aromatic is a better description for the lancetilla mango.

    Maybe they were spicy because I had to pick them while still very green, because the raccoons were clawing them, testing them for readiness.

    Too bad about your grafting - maybe you can remove some of the tape to see if the graft took before giving up altogether ?

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  11. I did check it out. The stem rotted, so I guess it wasn't deep enough. Although I suspect water seeping in to the taped part contributed to the rotting.

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