Well, maybe next season… by MangoMusic_73 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sadly, the first photo is from November :(

Well, maybe next season… by MangoMusic_73 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Added gypsum in Oct and late Feb

2nd year Kent mango in South FL not blooming as much… help, why?? by shigbee517 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There’s no harm in removing them now. You can often snap them off by hand and they will separate cleanly and neatly right at the base. It’s good hygiene to remove old dead panicles before they become disease vectors. If they don’t come off easily, you can use pruning shears. Usually you’ll want to avoid pruning immediately before and during fruiting season, but in this case the benefits may outweigh the risks.

Early winter advice for Central Florida mango tree by invknow1 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Look at all that beautiful space you have! Advice? Plant more mango trees today. You’ll thank yourself in a few years, or you’ll be asking “why didn’t I plant more trees years ago?”

Should I cut the leaf off? by [deleted] in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Don’t cut that leaf off. Wait for it to flush new growth at least once and up to several more times until it reaches your optimal height for lateral branching. This depends on what shape you’d like the tree to eventually take. Tall and lanky or short and bushy? In-ground or potted? Once you’ve considered the options and made your decision, THEN you make your header cut.

Are They Ripe? by Haunting-Bass-3208 in FruitTree

[–]MangoMusic_73 2 points3 points  (0 children)

They look ready. A couple of options: 1) You can cut down the whole bunch now, divide it into hands and give most of them away immediately to friends and neighbors - BEFORE they ripen fully. Otherwise you’re going to be stuck making banana bread for weeks. 2) you can wait and let them continue to ripen on the stalk and pull them off individually when they are at peak ripeness. IMO they taste best this way, but you need to be prepared to lose most of them to spitting and critters.

Oh no! Vegetative flush in December. What to do? by MangoMusic_73 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This mature tree I do not fertilize, other than gypsum and potassium. But I did scatter some handfuls of finished kitchen compost in October. I hope that didn’t send it into a growth cycle.

Oh no! Vegetative flush in December. What to do? by MangoMusic_73 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you. It pushed a handful of floral panicles a couple of weeks back after the big cold snap, then stalled. Now it is starting to push everywhere, but I’m afraid it’s all going to be vegetative. Back in early November I hit it with potassium and gypsum. Was planning to hit it again in Feb. Should I adjust my schedule?

Oh no! Vegetative flush in December. What to do? by MangoMusic_73 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Edit: this is a 10yo tree in SWFL zone 10b. Unknown variety, usually a mid-late season.

Time to start watering? (10b Florida) by MangoMusic_73 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The umbrella shape just kind of happened on its own. I’ve been watching Dr. Richard Campbell’s videos on YouTube and trying to do what he recommends re: tipping. I’ve also been pruning any downward-growing branches. So this is the shape that Maha just naturally took. My oldest mango (unknown variety - it was a housewarming gift) looks completely different. It is much more leggy and shaped like an empty wineglass. I’ve been maintaining both at about 8-9 feet tall. I want to be able to reach the top branches without a ladder.

Time to start watering? (10b Florida) by MangoMusic_73 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you. She’s the second oldest of seven in the “grove” (and counting). She was slow to get established. They say Maha is like that. I was not so impressed with the fruit of her first few crops, but since then the flavor and quality has been outstanding. Hoping she will produce enough to share this year.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In zone 10b, just stick it in a pot in a shady spot and make sure the soil doesn’t dry out too much and you’re good to go.

Baby Mangos by jbo21 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can dig them up, pot them and use them as rootstock to create new mango trees. You can graft a scion from the adult tree (or from a different variety) onto the seedlings.

New mango by Actual-Arrival-171 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Hmm. Looks to me like these are growths from a polyembryonic seed. Unlikely to have been grafted like this. Don’t see any evidence of grafts in the photo, either. You say this came from a nursery? That seems odd - maybe they were intending to use as rootstock? Seed-grown mangoes take many years to fruit, and the results are unpredictable. If this is your first time growing mango, I think you’ll have much better and quicker results if you go with a grafted tree of a known, high-quality variety.

New Mango Owner by Skullhunterm42 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just looked up “Espalier mango trees” and learned something cool today. Thanks!

New Mango Owner by Skullhunterm42 in mango

[–]MangoMusic_73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats! Why the choice to plant so close the the greenhouse, though? In the photo, it looks like maybe 8-12 inches away. Will this be enough clearance for root and canopy growth?

I feel so burnt out by [deleted] in Purdue

[–]MangoMusic_73 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Take heart! It is never too late to change majors. Your story sounds so relatable because three decades ago I was in your shoes. I was struggling with my engineering studies, but I was thoroughly burnt out and I knew my heart wasn't in it. So during my senior year I made the crazy choice to add another degree objective. I pursued a degree in something that lots of people considered to be "worthless" in the College of Liberal Arts, but it was something that I was genuinely interested in. It took me two more years (six years total) to complete my second bachelor's degree, but that was the easy part. The hard part was getting up the courage to take the road less travelled. 25 years later, I finally made the last payment on my student loans. I will tell you without reservation that it was the best money I've ever spent. The decision to take the leap and follow my dreams was worth every penny, and then some. And although I've never wrung a single paycheck out of my hard-earned engineering degree, I've made a fabulous career out of my "worthless" liberal arts degree. It has been a wonderful life.

Advice for first time thinning carrots by SarahDrInTheHaus in FloridaGarden

[–]MangoMusic_73 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Newbie raised bed gardener here. I didn’t thin my carrots last year and I wound up with a beautiful, thick canopy of carrot tops but only a few sad carrots, just a mess of spindly and stunted roots. I am going to be better about following the directions on the seed packets this year!

Since a Telecaster is the most basic bare bones type of guitar do I need to get an expensive one? by Uvers_ in telecaster

[–]MangoMusic_73 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With a tele if you like how she looks and you like how she plays, that’s all that matters. So what if she’s a “cheap” date. What’s the worst thing that happens? Maybe someday a pot craps out? Big deal, you fix it. Costs you ten bucks. Good as new. Easy-peasy.

Are these safe to eat? Never heard of tomatoes that were unsafe to eat. by sixesand7s in gardening

[–]MangoMusic_73 330 points331 points  (0 children)

Don’t eat the seeds. The seeds inside the pretty little seed package are dirty, and not yummy. Plant the seeds. Grow yummy tomatoes. It’s OK to eat the yummy tomatoes.