#Tropical #Mango #Grow Part 1: • Part 1: Nam Doc Mai Ma... Instagram: GreenMangoesLV Tiktok: GreenmangoesLong This Nam Doc Mai has been here in the desert for 3 months and ready to repot into a bigger pot (25 gallons).
Nice, my wife and I never tried a Nam Dok Mai because they are hard to find here in Puerto Rico, but I found out a Farmer here that cultivate them and export them outside Puerto Rico, they do not sell them in supermarket here, so I keep on looking for the distributor for this type of mango, until I found it, I bought two for my wife and I so we can try them and my Friend we where convinced that they are a true delight. I order six more mangoes so we can taste better their flavor and now I'm in contact with a Florida farmer who sell them for at least 5 to 7 feet tall so when he receive new trees for sale he will contact me. I watched your video and there are things I didn't know even though in Puerto Rico is the same weather as in southern Florida. I will not have much problem with the adaptation of the tree. I can't with for the Farmer's call. thanks my friend for your video. "Very Instructive".
I don't typically find Nam Doc Mai in market either. That was the reason why I decided to grow my own. You will not have trouble growing in Puerto Rico at all, if you have youtube channel and instagram, please share and would love to see updates from you. Thanks for watching
Your mango is growing very well. I have heard that mangoes and avocados both like to be very pot bound so I guess you could have left it in the smaller pot until Spring if you had wanted to 😁
U leave ur mango in full sun??? Wat about the pot??? It probeblys gets into the high 110s the pot is black and radiates heat. How do the roots do??? Im in Northern California and it gets to 100 plus in summer i have only been givin it 6 hours of sun
Hello, I just got to see your video. I have been watching videos about mangos for a while now. I am very interested to growing a mango because I love mangos and also we have mango plantation back home. I'm from the Philippines and live in Las Vegas. Please let me know where you bought your mango. Thank you for the information you've shared.
Do you bring your mango trees indoors for the winter? Is that why you have you NDM in a pot rather than in the ground? I just started growing mango trees this year but mine are younger trees. I am wondering if moving them into the covered patio would be enough, if not how do you protect them during the winter. Thanks!
Last winter I moved all my tropical trees into the covered patio and it did okay. If possible put covering over them even in covered patio for the days dropped under 30 degrees. I do have my Nam Doc Mai in pot for that purpose, once a litte more mature and the roots are bigger then become hardier to plant inground. For younger plants please pay close attention to them during winter months.
I have a few of my mango 🥭 trees growing in 12 inch diameter pots at the moment,I grew them from seed 2 years ago. We 2 of our hottest summer days of 2024 here in Australia where it got up to about 106°F (41°C) for the last 2 days although today (Saturday January 27) was cooler at 24°C (75°F). I live in a subtropical climate just north of Sydney (Newcastle) which is more forgiving to a Mango 🥭 tree, it's similar to South Carolina & Georgias climate in the U.S. although we do get hot weather 🌡️ particularly during an El Nino cycle where we get 113°F (45°C) summer ⛱️ days sporadically . The more developed mango 🥭 plants can take the heat a bit more than the 0-12 month seedling 🌱 plants which I have growing in the shade of a Japanese maple tree so that they don't get scorched 🥵 !
That doesn't look like sunburn on the leaves. That's usually because of overwatering. I have 25 mango trees and my Nam Doc Mai trees do that when they get too much water. Drying out leaf tips is due to too much water.
Usually I'd go to 15 before 25. This nam doc mai was already in 15 when I picked at nursery. Still super healthy and strong. A lot of growths, the key is sand and very well drained soil.