18 responses |
stephen starts with ... Seedless litchi: The seedless litchi tree is a new species grown in our nursery garden. They are fertile with steady productivity and all seeds inside the fruits completely fade out. These fruits are able to endure a long time of storage. They are bright red in color without kernels and the average weight can reach 42.6g. Flesh is sweet and crisp with an aroma of honey without astringent taste. It is considered the nonesuch among all kinds of litchis. Seedless litchi A4 is a unique nonesuch litchi species. The exclusive species can bear fruits by self-pollination. In general, 99% of the fruits are seedless with an average weight of 46g and 82.5g to the most. Flesh is thick and crisp in milk white and tastes sweet and balmy with an aroma like honey. The superior quality, wonderful taste and abundant nutrients make it not only a perfect fruit to eat, but also the best material for canned products. (It is not necessary to manually remove the kernels, thus reducing the cost dramatically). The production of seedless litchis has solved the serious problem of unstable yielding phenomenon for litchi varieties and the dream of steady high yield every year finally comes true. The development of seedless litchi trees is a golden market and it can bring considerable economic benefit with boundless prospects! http://www.fruit-trees-nursery.com/litchi.htm
| About the Author stephen China 9th March 2012 7:38pm #UserID: 6675 Posts: 3 View All stephen's Edible Fruit Trees |
||||||
Mike says... 40g+ average,82.5g max and seedless.It sounds too good to be true and even trumps the giant new one,posted recently (erdon lee?).A new seedless mutation of a regular variety is likely rather than species.It is a bit hard to swallow......especially at that size.I for one, am not convinced. | About the Author Cairns 9th March 2012 7:56pm #UserID: 0 Posts: View All 's Edible Fruit Trees |
||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reply | Edit |
| Remember to
LIKE this Answer(1)
LIKE this Question (0)
People who Like this Answer: aussieariods | |||||||
About the Author trikus tattered tropics 9th March 2012 8:04pm #UserID: 5279 Posts: 121 View All trikus's Edible Fruit Trees |
|||||||
stephen says... Seedless litchi is absolutely the best Litchi varieties.Who wants to buy trees or fruit can contact me. Stephen MSN : stephen.dong@live.cn E-mail :stephen.ddr@gmail.com http://www.fruit-trees-nursery.com/litchi.htm
| About the Author stephen China 9th March 2012 8:11pm #UserID: 6675 Posts: 3 View All stephen's Edible Fruit Trees |
||||||
Mike says... Stephen, this is a forum run by the generosity of a commercial nursery and it is not good form to utilise it to advertise another tropical fruit tree nursery. Importing fruit trees into Australia is complex and hardly worth it for potential Australian customers of yours due to quarantine requirements and restricions.Your nursery's description of fai zee sui lychee seemed reasonable.I would be surprised if western buyers would go for your jackfruit or guava varieties. | About the Author Cairns 9th March 2012 8:50pm #UserID: 0 Posts: View All 's Edible Fruit Trees |
||||||
About the Author stephen China 10th March 2012 12:16am #UserID: 6675 Posts: 3 View All stephen's Edible Fruit Trees |
|||||||
About the Author MaryT Sydney 10th March 2012 9:55am #UserID: 5412 Posts: 2066 View All MaryT's Edible Fruit Trees |
|||||||
Mike says... Hey Mary, I hope all is well with you.I have been tankin' up on chutney and it's great. The nursery above has poorer quality types of everything than Daleys, except for lychees,longans and mangoes and one species Daleys doesn't have.People won't go through the pain to get them. ETA of the parcel is Tuesday.There is about a dozen mangosteen,black sugar,brazil lettuce,kang kung and rice paddy herb and that is all.I didn't pad the plants as you suggested because these ones are tough. | About the Author Cairns 10th March 2012 11:55am #UserID: 0 Posts: View All 's Edible Fruit Trees |
||||||
About the Author MaryT Sydney 10th March 2012 1:12pm #UserID: 5412 Posts: 2066 View All MaryT's Edible Fruit Trees |
|||||||
john says... I think we ought to be a little more forbearing with this Chinese nursery. If you understand the cultural/historic context you may be more generous. Incidentally , he has Myrica rubra,aka Bayberry ,a wonderful fruit by all accounts and perfectly suited to large parts of Oz. I'd swap my wife for some. | About the Author 10th March 2012 6:06pm #UserID: 0 Posts: View All 's Edible Fruit Trees |
||||||
Reply | Edit |
| Remember to
LIKE this Answer(0)
LIKE this Question (1)
People who Like this Question | |||||||
About the Author MaryT Sydney 10th March 2012 6:15pm #UserID: 5412 Posts: 2066 View All MaryT's Edible Fruit Trees |
|||||||
Reply |
| Remember to
LIKE this Answer(0)
LIKE this Question (0)
Original Post was last edited: 10th March 2012 6:16pm | |||||||
About the Author JohnMc1 Warnervale NSW 10th March 2012 7:31pm #UserID: 2743 Posts: 2043 View All JohnMc1's Edible Fruit Trees |
|||||||
About the Author Cairns 10th March 2012 7:58pm #UserID: 0 Posts: View All 's Edible Fruit Trees |
|||||||
About the Author 11th March 2012 9:33am #UserID: 0 Posts: View All 's Edible Fruit Trees |
|||||||
Mike says... I see that their trees took only 3 years to produce commercial quantities from when they were planted out.Being a permited species for import, seeds for sowing attract a friendly C7100 AQIS ICON classification.Seeds can thus be freely ordered over the internet and brought back or mailed to Australia with modest conditions.I am surprised that they are not here in abundance already. | About the Author Cairns 11th March 2012 9:55am #UserID: 0 Posts: View All 's Edible Fruit Trees |
||||||
About the Author 11th March 2012 10:01am #UserID: 0 Posts: View All 's Edible Fruit Trees |
|||||||
About the Author Grubby Yeppoon 9th January 2020 7:36pm #UserID: 21447 Posts: 1 View All Grubby's Edible Fruit Trees |
|||||||
About the Author Chad1 LAKE ILLAWARRA,2528,NSW 6th June 2021 1:23pm #UserID: 12391 Posts: 64 View All Chad1's Edible Fruit Trees |
|||||||
Marmot1 says... Myrica rubra bayberries are delicious, my parents' farm has several big trees (grafted). I saw some poor quality bayberries in hurstville, NSW -------------------------------------- I noticed some organizations have a monopoly of some trees, say, sumo mandarin, maluma hass... To be honest, I don't want to see delicious bayberries fall into their hands. But still, you'd better control diseases and pests--don't risk it. Yellowdragon disease, it might destroy citrus in Australia | About the Author Marmot1 QUAKERS HILL,2763,NSW 7th June 2021 11:42am #UserID: 20667 Posts: 102 View All Marmot1's Edible Fruit Trees |
||||||