| Taken at the beginning of rainy season |
There are other options. You can grow the purple variety which is preferred in most of the world due to less acidity and better flavor. Purple flowers will self-pollinate. Or you can graft purple onto yellow to take advantage of yellow's disease/pest resistance.
I'm trying all three. I have a purple vine which just flowered last month and has nine large fruit maturing.
I am rooting out about 30 cuttings from the yellow vine onto which I will graft purple and see how that goes. I also got the yellow vine to accept purple pollen and make a fruit (which the internet seems to think is not possible) and I'll plant out the resulting hybrid seeds to see what comes of it.
Ask me about my mango seedlings next time.
(A)
We enjoy reading your updates and seeing your pictures. We are praying for your family.
ReplyDeleteThat is pretty impressive Andrew! I want to see a picture of you all enjoying the fruits of your labor!
ReplyDeleteHey, what about the mangoes?
ReplyDeleteI'm really enjoying the botanical details -- I once grew a bunch of hybrid passionfruit with my dad as part of some obscure passionfruit research down in Georgia. Most of it got eaten by that red caterpillar with the black spikes, as I recall.
In case you couldn't tell from the content, this is actually tom talking :)
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