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Is It Possible To Grow Avacado'S In Isaarn?


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Posted

Just wondering if it is possible to grow avacados in isaarn....by this i mean is the climate right for growning avacado trees, has anyone done it? where they nice?

Posted

Yes it is possible to grow them here, even in the poor soils of lower Buriram. I know someone who has several hundred trees, they are the grafted type that start to produce in about 3 years. The fruit is delicious.

Posted

Just wondering do you know what variety is being grown?

Thanks

Yes it is possible to grow them here, even in the poor soils of lower Buriram. I know someone who has several hundred trees, they are the grafted type that start to produce in about 3 years. The fruit is delicious.

Posted

Just wondering do you know what variety is being grown?

Thanks

Yes it is possible to grow them here, even in the poor soils of lower Buriram. I know someone who has several hundred trees, they are the grafted type that start to produce in about 3 years. The fruit is delicious.

The bloke I know grows both the 'pear' shaped avos. and also the round ones. Have no idea where he gets his grafts from, I'm sure any large gardening centre would know.

Posted

That's awesome thanks for that. Another question... Where do you get the grafts or seeds from ib thailand?

Just curious. Are you looking to get into the commercial marketing side of this delectable fruit? Or just a tree or two for personal/family use?

Good luck.

Posted

That's awesome thanks for that. Another question... Where do you get the grafts or seeds from ib thailand?

Just curious. Are you looking to get into the commercial marketing side of this delectable fruit? Or just a tree or two for personal/family use?

Good luck.

I would like up to 50 trees if anyone knows where I can acquire them.

Posted

That's awesome thanks for that. Another question... Where do you get the grafts or seeds from ib thailand?

Just curious. Are you looking to get into the commercial marketing side of this delectable fruit? Or just a tree or two for personal/family use?

Good luck.

I would like up to 50 trees if anyone knows where I can acquire them.

You're connected, my friend. I imagine that your local Buriram/Surin horticultural or nursery expert would know where to locate saplings enough to suffice. They do better in the south, of course.

Posted

That's awesome thanks for that. Another question... Where do you get the grafts or seeds from ib thailand?

Just curious. Are you looking to get into the commercial marketing side of this delectable fruit? Or just a tree or two for personal/family use?

Good luck.

Was thinking commercial (for my Thai GF of course)

Posted

I have a very small farm (27 rai) at Sirindhorn in Ubon. I planted the seed/nut from three advocados and two of them are still doing fine. One mysteriously dies after 5 years. The two remaining trees have not borne fruit yet. My udnerstanding was that you get stronger trees if grown from seed/nut rather than grafting.

This is a photo of part of my farm. The duo of avacado trees are too far in the distance to see.

post-138340-0-83140300-1313638879_thumb.

Posted
<br />I understood that fruit cannot be obtained from a Avacardo tree if grown from seed. <a href='http://www.willsavocados.com/index.php/grow-avocado-tree' class='bbc_url' title='External link' rel='nofollow external'>http://www.willsavoc...ow-avocado-tree</a><br /><br /><br />
<br /><br /><br />

I believe that you can get fruit from a tree that has been grown from seed. It is however pretty hit and miss and will take at least ten years.

Posted
<br />I understood that fruit cannot be obtained from a Avacardo tree if grown from seed. <a href='http://www.willsavocados.com/index.php/grow-avocado-tree' class='bbc_url' title='External link' rel='nofollow external'>http://www.willsavoc...ow-avocado-tree</a><br /><br /><br />
<br /><br /><br />

I believe that you can get fruit from a tree that has been grown from seed. It is however pretty hit and miss and will take at least ten years.

If anything, within ten years, they've matured enough to make lovely shading trees - broad leaves...

  • 2 weeks later...

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