This channel is dedicated to educating adults and children in growing organic fruits/vegetables in their urban environment (i.e backyards, side yards, front yards, pots etc). The goal is to motivate and influence other viewers to involve their children in growing organic, tasty foods around their homes. We're teaching from our own experiences (trials and failures), so if you have better insights from your gardening background, feel free to comment and share.
We are located in San Diego, Southern California (agriculture zone 10). Our focus is non-commercial so diversity of fruits/vegetables are key priorities to us, as well as methodologies such as permaculture and no tilling. We have over 50 organic fruit trees (mostly dwarf) to ensure fruit production across all seasons.
Both Allahabad Surkha (Pink) Allahabad Safeda (White) are Indian variety Guavas. Can you tell me is Gold Nugget mandarin a regular bearer? Is it productive every year?
Thank you for the guava insights. Great to know. My Gold Nugget mandarin is alternate year bearing. This is is loaded as last year it had a handfull of fruit
I had a key lime tree that started dying back and died. Wondered about being a finger lime. I love it that your pronunciation of sushi, Poke. And sashimi is pretty good!
@@thetreefather86 I'm trying to find different varieties. I have one that I believe is "tasty green" variety, the common green skin white inside. I'm looking for some pink/red ones
Greetings, Can you please share how you built access to the fruit trees on the slope? I have a similar situation in my backyard but with limited access and looking at ideas for this summer project.
Great video ! I have a question: are your guavas ripening in Sept- Oct ? We planted pink tropical guava from Home depot, it flowers in Jun-Jul, but ripens in March-Apr ( we are in Vista, zone 10). It has nice smell, but tastes like a green banana, no sweetness. I am not sure, if it is so tasteless because it ripens in early spring or it is a normal taste for these guavas.
Every variety of guava has ripens in a diferent time of year. Right now, I have Indian guavas and other guavas have flowers. If you plant more varieties, you'll have a long guava season
Very beautiful review great family Sweet 2 beautiful girls great work 👍🏻 👏 😍 I not to good English, I said in my heart I've opened it many times and shared it with others. thank you very much for making good clips. and please continue doing it
Thank you, guys! I just both my first red guava and got it delivered to Europe in Croatia. And I know now how to eat it. You guys are really cute, father daughter presentation❤ I miss my dad 😢
Yes the mystery avocado looks like a bacon to me. The shape, black bottom, early flowers, shape of the seed and the look of the flesh. When it gets older it will give about 50 to 100 fruit. I have a tree and I love it.
If fully ripe: a soft, smooth creamy texture with a medium-low sweet pear. If picked a bit green, a crunchy texture (apple like) with a hint of sour and mild sweet taste. Pleasant taste for a fruit for people that don't enjoy super sweet fruit
I had a Red Baron peach for several years. IMO the fruit was as wonderful as the flowers! It also seemed to resist peach leaf curl better than other peach varieties. Just planted my next (bareroot) Red Baron peach tree two months ago. It looks like it may ripen about 10 peaches this July if they don't fall off. A great variety that you can't go wrong with.
I am from India 🇮🇳 from odisha state Eastern part of india....I like your garden...as well as white indian guva fruits....it's a normal size guva but we have 1kg guva also...about 25 varity of guva are commercially grown in india, I have also a small garden...
It goes by fast. I bought mine as a seedling in 2016 and got my first fruit in 2021. I’ve kept it in pots hooked up to the automatic irrigation. Not gonna lie, The fruit is somewhat disappointing but the tree itself is beautiful. It’s similar to a crepe myrtle.
I love those metal raised beds - great investment! I’ve just subscribed and look forward to seeing your garden and your channel develop. (Also, I have a gardening channel too that you might like - check it out!)