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Tindomul 03-16-2018 10:24 PM

Tropical Blueberry Harvest
 
2 Attachment(s)
Hi all,

I had a tropical blueberry harvest, a small one, but this is unique I think, so I am sharing the experience. The berries come from Sphyrospermum buxifolium which is a beautiful vine with little hairy blueberries. The berries are lightly sweet with a quality that refreshes you, not minty though.

I include a shot of the tank and you can see lots of the vines criss-crossing the tank, and a picture of the harvest, only 20 something berries. There are however twice as many berries currently maturing.

César

Leafmite 03-16-2018 11:57 PM

Congratulations! Even better than growing a rare plant is getting to enjoy fruit from the rare plant. Did you need to hand pollinate it or does it set fruit without any intervention?

MrHappyRotter 03-17-2018 09:40 AM

Really neat. I love the idea of indoor gardening that also happens to produce food, and I think it's become quite a trend. Granted, it mostly involves more traditional crops, I'm sure very few people are growing something as exotic as this.

Does this plant produce a seasonal harvest or does it produce year round?

jcec1 03-17-2018 11:10 AM

Do they taste like regular blueberries?

DeaC 03-17-2018 11:34 AM

Pearls from a primordial forest and most interesting!

No-Pro-mwa 03-17-2018 12:30 PM

Way cool. I'm boring I only have a Aero Garden.

Tindomul 03-17-2018 02:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Leafmite (Post 870563)
Congratulations! Even better than growing a rare plant is getting to enjoy fruit from the rare plant. Did you need to hand pollinate it or does it set fruit without any intervention?



It did it all by itself. The flowers are tiny, bell shaped.


---------- Post added at 02:43 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:42 PM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by MrHappyRotter (Post 870579)
Really neat. I love the idea of indoor gardening that also happens to produce food, and I think it's become quite a trend. Granted, it mostly involves more traditional crops, I'm sure very few people are growing something as exotic as this.

Does this plant produce a seasonal harvest or does it produce year round?


Gi,

It's not seasonal as far as I can tell.


---------- Post added at 02:45 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:43 PM ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by jcec1 (Post 870592)
Do they taste like regular blueberries?

Hi,

No, traditional blueberries are much stronger. These are almost tasteless until you are almost done with them. They have a very light sweetness that is rather refreshing in the mouth.

Paul 03-17-2018 02:51 PM

Are you going to try sowing some seed?

Tindomul 03-17-2018 03:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Paul (Post 870640)
Are you going to try sowing some seed?


Thats how the whole thing started. I got the fruit from a friend and almost every seed inside made it. I have several other plants not in a terrarium that I started from seed. My daughter and I ate all the berries in the picture.:biggrin:

estación seca 03-17-2018 05:50 PM

There are southern blueberry varieties, bred from southern species in the US, that will grow and fruit in Arizona heat and sun, if properly cared for. (IF)

Some friends grew some. They went through a lot of plants figuring out what they needed. When they finally got some fruit, after some years, they said they calculated they had paid about $75 per blueberry.

Tindomul 03-17-2018 06:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by estación seca (Post 870671)
There are southern blueberry varieties, bred from southern species in the US, that will grow and fruit in Arizona heat and sun, if properly cared for. (IF)

Some friends grew some. They went through a lot of plants figuring out what they needed. When they finally got some fruit, after some years, they said they calculated they had paid about $75 per blueberry.

Wow, thats a lot. I hope they were worth it.

Leafmite 03-17-2018 10:48 PM

That is pretty neat that they self-pollinate.

Blueberry bushes grow easily here but if the bushes are not covered, the robins eat them all.

No-Pro-mwa 03-18-2018 09:22 AM

That is some expensive blue berries.

gnathaniel 03-18-2018 11:35 PM

Very cool! More people should grow epiphytic blueberries, they're great plants.


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