Home Shop News Catalog Search Contact Forum Blog

Daleys Fruit Tree Blog

Secondo Avocado

Anyone who loves avocados should have one growing in their back yard and the Secondo avocado is a surpurb choice. The Secondo originates from the hills around Kyogle where it has been bred from a seedling selected by a local Italian gentleman who it is named after. The fruits are truely delicious, they are a large pear shaped fruit with creamy flesh and thick textured skin. They are a cross between a Hass and a Sharwill and are a combination of the best of both these fruits. Trees will crop heavily and are self pollinating although they will benift from being near a B group avocado to maximise pollination and fruit set. They come off at about the same time as the Hass cropping from August through to December to January if you can leave them on the tree that long. The Secondo is the staff favourite amongst the avocados here at the nursery and we are often seen sneaking back from the orchard with our pockets bulging during the harvest season. We have some beautiful specimens in stock ready to be established in your garden.

Labels:

KathAdd Your Comment (18)
Published: Kath ,Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Comments so far: 18

Anonymous Anonymous said ...
how big does the tree grow?
Time: Thursday, December 21, 2006  
Blogger Kath said ...
The Secondo will grow to 8m if given ideal conditions but this will vary depending on soil type, moisture levels and nutrients.
Time: Thursday, December 21, 2006  
Anonymous Anonymous said ...
Would this variety grow in Melbourne? If not, what other would you suggest, bearing in mind that we would like it to fruit as soon as possible.
Time: Saturday, December 23, 2006  
Anonymous Kate said ...
So it grows 8 m tall, does it get very wide? Does it have invasive roots? Does it get invaded by fruit fly? and one more question, is it an evergreen tree. I have a small/medium backyard
Time: Wednesday, January 17, 2007  
Blogger Kath said ...
The Secondo is a full sized avocado that grows to about 8m depending on conditions. It would be worth trying in Melbourne if you have the space. Trees can reach 8m wide when fully grown. Fruit flies do not sting the fruits. Avocados are evergreen trees, they have a taproot but it is not deep. Once established the roots can be spreading and competitive and can interfere with nearby plants or buildings.
Time: Wednesday, January 24, 2007  
Anonymous Anonymous said ...
I have an avocado tree with lots of medium sized fruit, but none seem to ripen....and they are not getting any bigger. Any ideas?
Time: Friday, January 26, 2007  
Anonymous MSS said ...
I have never tasted Sharwil, but I have heard it is a good one. So a cross between it and Hass is really intriguing.

Is there any chance I'll be able to get this 'Secondo' in California any time soon?
Time: Wednesday, January 31, 2007  
Blogger Spots said ...
I believe that avocados do not ripen until they have been picked from the tree. So start picking the fruit to enjoy them.
Also if you are worried about the size of an avocado tree one can always prune it. A neighbour of mine does that each year to keep the size of his tree under control.
Time: Wednesday, January 31, 2007  
Anonymous Anonymous said ...
I have a tree grown from a stone (left over from some nachos a while back) - Its going well, will it ever fruit, how big will it get if I move it to a 1000mm diameter pot.
Time: Wednesday, February 07, 2007  
Blogger Kath said ...
Seedling avocados are more vigorous than grafted specimens and they take about 6-8 years to set fruit. They are not true to type but you can be lucky and have a superb fruit from a seedling tree like the Secondo. They will be much happier if they are grown in the ground. If you pick the fruits too early they will not ripen off the tree instead the flesh turns black, this is an indication that they need longer to ripen before picking.
Time: Friday, February 09, 2007  
Anonymous Peter L. Robinson said ...
Hi. I have worked on Hass and Shepard avocado farms. I am wondering if Secondo has the bitter after taste of Hass, or is more like the "clean"taste of shepard.
Also, is there a variety that will produce fruit in a slightly dryer climate (South Burnett)?
Time: Tuesday, February 20, 2007  
Blogger jo said ...
have large avocado tree in adelaide, how much and when should it be pruned? some of outer leaves quite brown. also what is best for around base of tree, natural foliage or can gravel/pebbles be used?
Time: Monday, August 20, 2007  
Blogger Kath said ...
Jo, Most avocado trees are usually never pruned: if branches branches are exposed to the sun they become susceptible to sunburn and dieback. Pruning is only necessary to shape young trees and remove diseased or damaged branches, though you can prune very vigorous stems to reduce tree height.
You can use gravel and pebbles as mulch under you tree but they do not give your tree any valuable. I prefer to use an organic mulch such as lucerne hay to mulch my trees with, this will not only suppress weeds but it will also feed your tree with nutrients as it rots down.
Time: Tuesday, August 21, 2007  
Anonymous Anonymous said ...
have an avocado tree in the garden with small first ever fruit, but I do not know what the month to pick is. Should I be picking them before April in southern victoria
Time: Tuesday, March 18, 2008  
Anonymous Anonymous said ...
I live in South-west Sydney and have an avocado tree in my garden. The tree is huge and about 13 years old. It flowers a lot, but gives very little fruit, which turns out also to be very small. Is there any thing I can do to improve things?
Time: Saturday, April 26, 2008  
Blogger SueNami said ...
I live in Los Angeles and have 2 wonderful Secundo avocado trees in our backyard. The house was built in 1921 and we believe the trees are at least as old as the house, if not older, since there were many citrus and avocado orchards here back then. When our family bought the house in 1971, the soil in the yard had been depleted of minerals and was like sand, so we fertilized and turned the soil. The trees are very healthy. They have not grown much bigger then when we first bought the house 37 years ago. We have HUNDREDS of fruit this year for some reason, the biggest problem we have are with squirrels & blue jay birds knocking them down too soon, so they rarely get to grow to full size. However, this is not a problem. The best way to ripen them is place them in a brown paper bag, several is fine, in a cabinet, a cool dry place (NOT in plastic bags, they will rot quickly). Even the smaller young avocados will ripen to full flavor within 3 - 15 days and taste SUPERB! I cannot imagine an avocado tasting any better than these do. People at my work BEG me to bring them in! All you need is a little salt on them and you can eat them with a spoon right out of the skin! Or mash them on bread for a light sandwich. The flavor is devine. Tree size: The leaves & lower branches do reach to the ground if you don't trim them, which can be great for shade. The branches on our trees grow pretty low however so you can't place a gazebo under them, although you can place a picnic table under them easily. And you can stand and walk around under the trees. Our friends call our trees "money trees" because they are truly full of valuable treasure! We love 'em!

Susan Jones
Glendale, California
Time: Wednesday, June 11, 2008  
Blogger SueNami said ...
I live in Los Angeles and have 2 wonderful Secundo avocado trees in our backyard. The house was built in 1921 and we believe the trees are at least as old as the house, if not older, since there were many citrus and avocado orchards here back then. When our family bought the house in 1971, the soil in the yard had been depleted of minerals and was like sand, so we fertilized and turned the soil. The trees are very healthy. They have not grown much bigger then when we first bought the house 37 years ago. We have HUNDREDS of fruit this year for some reason, the biggest problem we have are with squirrels & blue jay birds knocking them down too soon, so they rarely get to grow to full size. However, this is not a problem. The best way to ripen them is place them in a brown paper bag, several is fine, in a cabinet, a cool dry place (NOT in plastic bags, they will rot quickly). Even the smaller young avocados will ripen to full flavor within 3 - 15 days and taste SUPERB! I cannot imagine an avocado tasting any better than these do. People at my work BEG me to bring them in! All you need is a little salt on them and you can eat them with a spoon right out of the skin! Or mash them on bread for a light sandwich. The flavor is devine. Tree size: The leaves & lower branches do reach to the ground if you don't trim them, which can be great for shade. The branches on our trees grow pretty low however so you can't place a gazebo under them, although you can place a picnic table under them easily. And you can stand and walk around under the trees. Our friends call our trees "money trees" because they are truly full of valuable treasure! We love 'em!

Susan Jones
Glendale, California
Time: Wednesday, June 11, 2008  
Anonymous Anonymous said ...
We moved into our house 18 months ago & didn't even know what type of tree it was until we saw a lone pear shaped fruit taking its time to grow. We want to tidy up the lower branches, they are showing some damage. Also we wouldn't mind taking out the height of the tree. Is there a better time of year to prune on the Central Coast of NSW?
Does anyone have advice on ways to encourage more fruit to grow?
Time: Wednesday, June 18, 2008  

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Fruit Tree Blog