Q: What is the rarest and unusual plant that you have? I want
something special for my tropical fruit tree collection. I already have
everything I could possibly get...
A: Are you sure you have everything? Check out our rare plant section, and look at these couple plants we just received...
these won't last long, we have only a few!
Quararibea cordata - Zapote Chupachupa, South American
Sapote (with express shipping)
Chupa-chupa, Zapote, South American Sapote...
One of the most amazing and showy tropical fruit trees with huge
heart-shaped leaves, heart-shaped fruit, and fast-growing habit. The fruit has a
bizarre shape like a large breast with a nipple, and the pulp is very tasty. For
best performance, the tree needs full sun, rich soil, plenty of moisture and
fertilizer.
Garcinia mangostana - Mangosteen
Mangosteen... This delicious fruit has a thick, dark-red skin, inside which are
creamy-white segments with a sweet, slightly tart flavor. Purported by many
who have had the luxury of tasting it as being the best tasting fruit in the
world.
Q: I have ordered dozens of trees from you and have a question
about Soursop. I have a Soursop in a container and ants and aphids are under
new leaves. Do Soursop like little water? I water almost everyday living in
southern Los Angeles it's been around 76-80F. I spray the aphids and ants off
with a mist setting on my hose. They come back every day. They're only on new
leaves...
A: First of all, you don't have to remove the ants iа they
don't bother you. Ants are good insects, they do not harm plants; most likely
they are attracted by a sweet sap - aphid by-product. Ants clean up a plant,
and they may even take care of some bad insects.
It is not difficult to get rid of aphids. Use a safe treatment: in a
small spray bottle, mix 1 cup of warm water, 1 teaspoon of dish soap and 2
tablespoons of any cooking oil (if you have Neem oil or Horticultural oil - even
better, but prepare, they are pretty stinky). Spray the leaves with this
solution to a dripping point. Repeat in a few days if needed. This simple remedy
will take care of the aphids.
Daily water may be ok for the plant during hot weather, as long as the
soil is not constantly moist. Let the surface of the soil get a little dry
between waterings.
Q: I received a Tabernaemontana africana, but it is not the
compact
cultivar, from the photo, this is definitely the tree version, not the
compact version?
A: The plant in your picture is Tabernaemontana africana and it is a shrub version, not a tree. The
plants we have in stock are smaller size but very vigorous so they can be
trained into standards.
We have this plant in our garden in the ground (3 years old) and by now
it bushed out and remains under 4 ft without any pruning. Just keep in mind
this plant requires regular applications of micro-elements, because the
species is very susceptible to iron deficiency.
The supplement we use, in case you notice any leaf yellowing, is Sunshine-Superfood.
Q: I purchased Parijat plant last year spring. It had good growth
in Summer, after that I kept the plant inside the house in winter. A couple
of weeks it was ok, after that the plant lost leaves. What is a better idea
for growing Parijat plant indoors in Winter?
A:Nyctanthes arbor-tristis, Parijat - is a semi-deciduous plant, which
means, it may lose its leaves during unfavorable conditions such as drought,
cold, low light and/or humidity. In your case, the plant dropped leaves because
of the stress of moving indoors that includes reducing light and humidity
levels. When a tropical plant loses leaves during winter, this means it goes
into a dormant stage. If this happens, you need to reduce watering and keep the
plant on a dry side, water in only when the top level of the soil feels dry
to touch. Do not fertilize.
Try to place the plant in a well-lit spot such as a windowsill. If the
windowsill and the window glass feel too cold for touch during wintertime,
you may place a sheet of a Styrofoam underneath the pot, and a sheet of a
bubble-wrap between the plant and the window glass, to create an extra barrier
from cold. The plant may re-leaf during wintertime; if not, it may wait until
spring, be patient.
Bring it back into outdoor light when minimum temperatures rise above
65F and resume fertilizing.
"A tuberose by any other name would smell as sweet..."
by Mark Hooten, the Garden Doc
A: Recently, we received a beautifully grown batch of Polianthes tuberosa, all in one gallon pots. These are commonly called
Tuberose in the cut-flower trade. I was so happy to see them that I could
hardly contain myself from exploding with joy! It had been such a number of
years since I have even seen this plant that I had nearly forgotten about its
existence. I first grew it as a little kid "up north", after seeing it listed in
an old-fashioned mail-order catalogue, probably Gourney's. I remember doing
things like mowing neighbors lawns and shoveling snow from driveways in-order
to save enough money so that toward spring I could order a few things from
those plant catalogues...
Continue reading...
Photo: Mr Barcy meditating before planting Nutmeg
seeds
Q: I planted an avocado seed and it sprouted quickly, it has been
only a couple months and I already have a small plant. How soon will it
produce fruit? Can I grow other tropical fruit from seed?
A: Unfortunately, some fruit trees, including varieties of
avocado, mango, lychee, as well as apples and peaches - must be either grafted or
air-layered in order to produce, for 2 main reasons:
- seedlings may take a very long time until fruiting, up to 10-15 years
- seedling gives no guarantee on the quality of the fruit or variety
These fruit trees should be propagated as "clones" - both grafted
material or cuttings are actually copies of the mother plant and will keep the
same fruit qualities. Grafted trees usually start producing immediately.
However there is a number of fruit trees that come true from seed, and
take a very short time to start flowering. Jackfruit, Annonas (Sugar Apple, Guanabana, etc), Papaya, Icecream Bean, Eugenias start producing at a young age (3-4 years from seed).
Q: I am a rare plant collector and obtained a very interesing
cultivar of Monstera from you that says it's a hybrid Monstera adansonii x obliqua. Is there a named hybrid? The leaves on
this specimen that came in 1 gal pot are much larger than the plant I have
grown in a 3 gal pot for a few years, under name of Monstera friedrichsthalii.
A: Due to their diversity, it is hard to find verified hybrids in
the genus Monstera. M. friedrichsthalii is apparently an old Florida name
for what is actually technically M. adansonii. The "primitive" juvenile growth
is very different from the much larger more robust form that only occurs when
it is allowed time to climb a tree, in which case the foliage becomes very
different and much larger with many many more fenestrations (holes) of various
sizes. If you visit our Garden Center, you can see the mature form climbing
the oak tree in our Shade Garden in front of our office - we use this mature
plant for propagation. If you take a cutting and don't let it attach to a
bark/trunk and climb upwards, it will quickly revert to the wimpy juvenile form.
Seems that even climbing a pole indoors, it never actually develops into the
truly mature more complex adult stage.
Some juvenile forms growing on a tree if given too much shade, do not
develop into the larger mature form. Move it in more light and allow it to climb,
and it will look very different, but still is the same plant under different
conditions.
Q: Can tropical fruit trees (Soursop, Mango, Star fruit, etc) be
given plant food any time of year? Also can they be trimmed this time of
year/summer?
A: True tropical plants (including fruit trees) need plant food
most of the year in real Tropics, where temperatures have very little
fluctuations, and active growth season is close to 12 months a year. In subtropical
areas when temperatures in winter drop below 65F, plant metabolism slows down,
so it is recommended to fertilize only during the warmest period (March
through November). So yes, Summer is the perfect time for fertilizing your trees;
their metabolism is at the highest point and they can use more food!
Trim your fruit trees right after harvesting. Obviously, you don't want
to prune branches before or during flowering or fruiting. The specific time
of the year for pruning depends on the plant - every tree has its own
flowering/fruiting season. However, avoid pruning right before winter: young shoots
promoted by pruning are tender and can be cold damaged.
Q: I need a tree for a space that is close to a pool and I don't
want a tree that is shedding leaves all year long. I don’t want it too big
either. The canary tree caught my attention but I need to know if it is a
tree that is dropping leaves all year. If it does then can you recommend another
tree? I live in Fort Lauderdale.
A:Canary tree is a good choice. It is free-flowering pretty little tree.
It is evergreen and doesn't shed leaves too much especially in your area with
mild winter. However, keep in mind that every plant sheds leaves. Even
evergreen trees replace old leaves with new ones. Some trees more than others.
Flowers also have a seasonal drop.
You may check the full list of compact flowering trees suitable for small spaces.
Another great choice is a Dwarf Tree Jasmine, Radermachera - also a free-flowering tree with rose-fragrant flowers
and large, architectural leaves that hardly ever drop. It has very dense yet
compact columnar shape, and is one of the greatest trees for smaller
landscapes.
Q: On the website, it says that the pua keni keni tree is toxic.
Do you know how toxic? Is it mild irritation or can someone die from
ingesting any part of the plant?
A:Pua Keni Keni, Fagraea - seeds (and especially flesh of the fruit) are
toxic, so we recommend to always wash your hands after handling them.
Obviously, nobody in our team ever tried to eat them to check how toxic
they are and if they are deadly.
In general, one must be careful when using plants for purposes other
than ornamental growing, especially for consumption. While some obvious edibles
(cultivated fruit, vegetables, herbs) are generally safe, but some
individuals may have severe reactions - for example, many people are allergic to
mangoes; other people may be sensitive to only mango leaves.
A number of plants that have parts commonly consumed for food, have
other parts toxic or poisonous. Example: Potato - Solanum tuberosum - has edible
tubers feeding the whole planet population, but this plant's fruit is highly
toxic and even deadly if eaten. Fruit from a Potato plant look like tiny
little green tomatoes since Potato belongs to the same family as Tomato -
Nightshade, but it is super poisonous, while Tomato fruit is perfectly edible. So
one must watch out and especially educate little children about not tasting
anything directly from the garden.
As far as animals concern, in Nature they know what is poisonous and
what is edible. Have you ever seen dead birds around a tree with poisonous
fruit/seeds? Animals have their own sense for it. So if your concern is for pets,
it is normally safe to have pets around plants with irritating or even
poisonous parts. However, if your dog has a bad habit of chewing on stuff, you may
use extra caution there.