I have a yellow passion fruit vine that I have in a large pot as well as a giant granadilla in another large pot, which are being trained along my patio pergola. I've been hand pollinating my yellow passion flowers and have some fruit forming! The giant granadilla needs more time, but both plants are happy and growing! I live in Kissimmee, in the Orlando, FL area. We are zone 9B and have had a hotter-than-normal winter, other than Christmas weekend. I've been watering the vines maybe once or twice a week- not too much but whenever I go to water all of my garden space. It's not even the hurricane season right now- then we'll get rain every afternoon. I'm so happy my yellow passion fruit is growing, I just wish the carpenter bees would do their job. 😅👍
I have the same plant. I live in Orlando also. Seeds came from a family plant in Puerto Rico. My passion fruit is in an enclosure so no bees or bugs can get to it so I have to pollinate the flowers by hand. I take a thin paint brush, fan out the hairs. I’ll then take the brush and smother the pollen from the anthers and spread them on the stigmas. I’ve learned that these plants are time sensitive so there’s a specific time to do this after the flower blooms. I’ve been pollinating around 8pm giving the flower time to fully mature and be able to produce fruit. Since I have figured this out and started, I’ve now went from all my flowers falling to more than 10 fruits growing. Hope this helps!
My growing season is too short to get any usable fruit it doesn't have time to mature, but I love the flowers and love watching the bees and butterflies etc.enjoy the flowers. I'm interested in learning to to use the flowers and leaves in tea...
Thanks for your beautiful video, I love passion fruit too. I am in zone 7a it’s very cold in winter I started planting 3 years ago it grew very well and lots of flowers but didn’t turn to fruit, this year flowers turned to fruits but towards end of summer however I have it in a big pot and brought it inside the house but fruits didn’t grow large enough and all died. I trimmed all branches and after last frost time early May I will bring it outside, hopefully this year will be fruitful. Any advice will be appropriated.
How did it go planting them in those pots? Did it still grow tall and over the trellis? Do you recommend / not recommend planting planter bags in the ground to control the roots? And what size bag, (10 gallon?) would you recommend for a trellis of similar size to yours? Would you do anything differently? Thanks. I want to put a 4’ x7’ trellis against a wall of my stucco house but I am afraid if I plant it in the ground its roots will grow out into the lawn. Thanks.
Hey, really found the video educational! Had no idea the leaves could be eaten. I'm living in a colder climate where the winters are long, what can I do during the winter,once the plant has grown on the trellis on my balcony? Do I leave it out and let the leaves to fall? Does the plant die?
I just found out a couple seeds from one of these actually sprouted and I'm very excited! I'm from Missouri and we have a native Passionfruit here (Passiflora Incarnata) and it usually has lavender to purple flowers, but mine has white and green alternating petals with a purple corona that is very beautiful! The fruits are also delicious and completely different from what you've covered here (Passiflora Edulis). I can't wait to try mixing the two plants and maybe coming up with my own hybrids!
Plants that you start from seed will not have the same genetics as the parent plant. Starting a new plant from *_cuttings_* is the best way to ensure that your new plant will have exactly the same genetics as the parent plant -- the same vigor, disease resistance, and productivity.
I'm growing passiflora edulis outdoors in my apartment patio and planning to repot it next year in spring in a bigger container, I like the design and shape of the container you use to pot up your passionvine! Where did you get it?
Thank you, I really enjoyed this video. I have my own passionfruit tree which I hope will fruit this summer. I just wanted to share with you something called electroculture, I now use this in my own garden and I no longer need to use any fertilisers or pesticides. The youtube channel for this is called "cultivate elivate".
Thanks for sharing this video! I’m a gardener too and I’m researching all the things I can grow in containers. I’m happy it led me to find you. I’m so happy it did your channel has so much to offer! This is very helpful. Thanks for teaching me something new. I hope we can learn more from each other as we grow our gardens and our channels!
Looks great i tried getting one to sprout this year but didnt happen. Good job with yours. So is yours shaded all the time? Im in western southern nevada
My plant's flower is a mixture of white and purple just like yours. Is it purple or yellow passion fruit? Also how long do I have to wait before picking the fruits? Will I be able to ripen it after picking from the vine unmatured?
Interesting that your plant already has fruit on it. My plants are much bigger but still no flower buds let alone fruit. Mine are about 13 months old now.
The leaves seem different than mine. Mine are like a chickens foot….and though I live in zone 5 it came back. I didn’t know what it was u til it flowered. Two flowers . Completely covered a small tree. I am hoping it doesn’t come back because I don’t think in my zone it will bear fruit
They are vigorous growers! We hope your tree is okay. There are passionflower vines that are not fruiting plants, they just produce beautiful flowers and they can grow in zones 5-10. There are over 400 species of passionflower vines, you may have one of those varieties. If you take pictures of the flower and the leaves and take those to your local county extension office or plant nursery they may be able to tell you which variety you have.
Probably Maypop (passiflora incarnata) which is the hardiest passion flower. Those also have 3 lobed leaves. Passionflora caerulea is also fairly hardy (it can survive a typical zone 6 winter), but it typically has 5 or 7 lobed leaves.
I am in England.last year I have grown a purple passion fruit. It is in the kitchen in a pot.I have lots leaves coming No flowers yet. I have heard leaves can eat.Its very bitter.I only tasted the leaves.Can the perple passion fruit leaves are edible.
I’m in zone 7A/B in northern Virginia. I grow my vine in ground but since we have harsh winters, I take a few cuttings in the fall and root them. The rooted cuttings sit in small pots in my garage all winter under white 5K LED lights. After last frost in spring, I transplant back into the ground. The vines grow slowly at first but take off when it gets really hot. I get a lot of fruit.
So if you’re growing in a container all season, you should just cut it back to a few feet high and bring it inside for winter. The stem will be significantly larger by the end of the summer, so your fruiting should be even more prolific the following season when you bring it back out.
I'd caution against using a narrow mouth pot. I made that mistake with a citrus tree. It's almost impossible to remove to repot. They look cool, but never again!
Greetings ! Thank you so much for the great information on growing passion fruit. I have one that I started from seed about a year ago. It's vining now. Yayyy!! I need to transplant it into a larger pot, so thank you for that info as well! I love your pot up station. Where did you purchase it? Happy gardening:)
2 Peter 3:18 KJV But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To him be glory both now and for ever. Amen. John 3:16 KJV For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. John 14:6 KJV Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me. 2 Corinthians 5:21 KJV For he hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in him. Romans 10:9 KJV That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved.
That is an ornamental cultivar and completely inedible, it's toxic. Also, approximately 20million people in the US alone have a latex allergy that will be set off by the similar compound in the few edible varieties of passionfruit (which are not in this video). This can cause anaphylaxis and death. I happen to own a nursery and came across this monstrosity of a video while looking for a particular cultivar. Bridgett- this is awful behavior, and you should not be posing as a subject matter expert.
Growing a passion fruit vine in a container is like raising an elephant in a small shed. You probably had to water it 5 times a day or put an all-day dripper into the pot.
Another source on YT prefers to grow his PF in pots to restrict suckers developing. It helps him manage his plants. PF can easily grow 20feet in a season, so not everyone can take on this plant for that kind of real estate, but it doesn’t mean they can’t have one
@@Penguinchubb0 20 feet in a season? I have one that grew 40 feet in all directions in one season. It completely took over half of a very large oak tree. If you want to make a bonsai out of a passion fruit vine, then be my guest, but that's as useless as a wooden frying pan.
Well this video definitely had more info then the other ones. Just learned off shoots grow from the roots. And that the leaves and flowers are edibles too. Definitely potting my passion fruit plant.
@0.15.... you look like someone weighing around 60 Kilogram by physical weight. And then you also said in your 30-35 years of life you had consumed TONS OF PASSION FRUIT. Am I missing something??? Because I am trying to wonder how much sewage was added post consumption of so much fruit, with end result visible just 60 kilograms while the excretion was way high. 🥴🥴🥴
I have a yellow passion fruit vine that I have in a large pot as well as a giant granadilla in another large pot, which are being trained along my patio pergola. I've been hand pollinating my yellow passion flowers and have some fruit forming! The giant granadilla needs more time, but both plants are happy and growing! I live in Kissimmee, in the Orlando, FL area. We are zone 9B and have had a hotter-than-normal winter, other than Christmas weekend. I've been watering the vines maybe once or twice a week- not too much but whenever I go to water all of my garden space. It's not even the hurricane season right now- then we'll get rain every afternoon. I'm so happy my yellow passion fruit is growing, I just wish the carpenter bees would do their job. 😅👍
Hey could you give me some cutting? 😍
Estou querendo muito uma mudinha. Vc tem?
I have the same plant. I live in Orlando also. Seeds came from a family plant in Puerto Rico. My passion fruit is in an enclosure so no bees or bugs can get to it so I have to pollinate the flowers by hand. I take a thin paint brush, fan out the hairs. I’ll then take the brush and smother the pollen from the anthers and spread them on the stigmas. I’ve learned that these plants are time sensitive so there’s a specific time to do this after the flower blooms. I’ve been pollinating around 8pm giving the flower time to fully mature and be able to produce fruit. Since I have figured this out and started, I’ve now went from all my flowers falling to more than 10 fruits growing. Hope this helps!
My growing season is too short to get any usable fruit it doesn't have time to mature, but I love the flowers and love watching the bees and butterflies etc.enjoy the flowers. I'm interested in learning to to use the flowers and leaves in tea...
Thanks you very much for assisting me.
Thanks for your beautiful video, I love passion fruit too. I am in zone 7a it’s very cold in winter I started planting 3 years ago it grew very well and lots of flowers but didn’t turn to fruit, this year flowers turned to fruits but towards end of summer however I have it in a big pot and brought it inside the house but fruits didn’t grow large enough and all died. I trimmed all branches and after last frost time early May I will bring it outside, hopefully this year will be fruitful.
Any advice will be appropriated.
How did it go planting them in those pots? Did it still grow tall and over the trellis? Do you recommend / not recommend planting planter bags in the ground to control the roots? And what size bag, (10 gallon?) would you recommend for a trellis of similar size to yours? Would you do anything differently? Thanks. I want to put a 4’ x7’ trellis against a wall of my stucco house but I am afraid if I plant it in the ground its roots will grow out into the lawn. Thanks.
Woww!!!! I've had my plant 2 yrs almost. This video has seriously taught me more then any other. I'm still waiting on flowers or fruit. Thank you. ❤❤
i planted earlier this spring and about a dozen of them grew, they're now about a foot tall. the leaves are so pretty.
I just brought 2 passionfruit plants! Thankyou.
Hey, really found the video educational! Had no idea the leaves could be eaten. I'm living in a colder climate where the winters are long, what can I do during the winter,once the plant has grown on the trellis on my balcony? Do I leave it out and let the leaves to fall? Does the plant die?
Great video! Thanks and Hello from Alberta
I just found out a couple seeds from one of these actually sprouted and I'm very excited!
I'm from Missouri and we have a native Passionfruit here (Passiflora Incarnata) and it usually has lavender to purple flowers, but mine has white and green alternating petals with a purple corona that is very beautiful! The fruits are also delicious and completely different from what you've covered here (Passiflora Edulis).
I can't wait to try mixing the two plants and maybe coming up with my own hybrids!
Plants that you start from seed will not have the same genetics as the parent plant. Starting a new plant from *_cuttings_* is the best way to ensure that your new plant will have exactly the same genetics as the parent plant -- the same vigor, disease resistance, and productivity.
Thank you for the video. My PF is doing great. Good advice
Looks great!
Goshhhhhh you are Absolutely Addorable!!!!!
I'm growing passiflora edulis outdoors in my apartment patio and planning to repot it next year in spring in a bigger container, I like the design and shape of the container you use to pot up your passionvine! Where did you get it?
Thank you, I really enjoyed this video. I have my own passionfruit tree which I hope will fruit this summer. I just wanted to share with you something called electroculture, I now use this in my own garden and I no longer need to use any fertilisers or pesticides. The youtube channel for this is called "cultivate elivate".
I love passion fruit
Very helpful thanks
So beautiful i love it
I love passion fruit farm
Thanks for sharing this video! I’m a gardener too and I’m researching all the things I can grow in containers. I’m happy it led me to find you. I’m so happy it did your channel has so much to offer! This is very helpful. Thanks for teaching me something new. I hope we can learn more from each other as we grow our gardens and our channels!
Looks great i tried getting one to sprout this year but didnt happen. Good job with yours. So is yours shaded all the time? Im in western southern nevada
I am in zone 7/b, -13 Celsius sometimes in winter, is it frist hardy or it needs to be brought indoors, or how to overwinter it? Thanks
My plant's flower is a mixture of white and purple just like yours. Is it purple or yellow passion fruit?
Also how long do I have to wait before picking the fruits? Will I be able to ripen it after picking from the vine unmatured?
What growzone are you in?
Did u need manually pollinate?
Good idea
Interesting that your plant already has fruit on it. My plants are much bigger but still no flower buds let alone fruit. Mine are about 13 months old now.
Great 🎉🎉🎉
Thanks for sharing, is it ok in a 40cm pot?
Very useful and complete. Thanks.
The leaves seem different than mine. Mine are like a chickens foot….and though I live in zone 5 it came back. I didn’t know what it was u til it flowered. Two flowers . Completely covered a small tree. I am hoping it doesn’t come back because I don’t think in my zone it will bear fruit
They are vigorous growers! We hope your tree is okay. There are passionflower vines that are not fruiting plants, they just produce beautiful flowers and they can grow in zones 5-10. There are over 400 species of passionflower vines, you may have one of those varieties. If you take pictures of the flower and the leaves and take those to your local county extension office or plant nursery they may be able to tell you which variety you have.
Also you can just use the app “picture this “ or I’m sure there’s a bunch of other plant identifying apps to find out what it is
Probably Maypop (passiflora incarnata) which is the hardiest passion flower. Those also have 3 lobed leaves. Passionflora caerulea is also fairly hardy (it can survive a typical zone 6 winter), but it typically has 5 or 7 lobed leaves.
I am in England.last year I have grown a purple passion fruit.
It is in the kitchen in a pot.I have lots leaves coming No flowers yet.
I have heard leaves can eat.Its very bitter.I only tasted the leaves.Can the perple passion fruit leaves are edible.
What will you do with it in the winter time?
I’m in zone 7A/B in northern Virginia. I grow my vine in ground but since we have harsh winters, I take a few cuttings in the fall and root them. The rooted cuttings sit in small pots in my garage all winter under white 5K LED lights. After last frost in spring, I transplant back into the ground. The vines grow slowly at first but take off when it gets really hot. I get a lot of fruit.
So if you’re growing in a container all season, you should just cut it back to a few feet high and bring it inside for winter. The stem will be significantly larger by the end of the summer, so your fruiting should be even more prolific the following season when you bring it back out.
Thank you very much for the information
I'd caution against using a narrow mouth pot. I made that mistake with a citrus tree. It's almost impossible to remove to repot. They look cool, but never again!
VERY GOOD CONGRATULATIONS 😂😂😁
how old is that plant in the time of recording ?
Greetings ! Thank you so much for the great information on growing passion fruit. I have one that I started from seed about a year ago. It's vining now. Yayyy!! I need to transplant it into a larger pot, so thank you for that info as well! I love your pot up station. Where did you purchase it? Happy gardening:)
At first I was like Mischa Barton gross passion fruit 😂
I didn't think all passiflora were edible. It would have been helpful to include certain varieties that will do well in pots and are smaller growers.
gr🎉🎉🎉
2 Peter 3:18 KJV
But grow in grace, and in the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. To him be glory both now and for ever. Amen.
John 3:16 KJV
For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
John 14:6 KJV
Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.
2 Corinthians 5:21 KJV
For he hath made him to be sin for us, who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in him.
Romans 10:9 KJV
That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved.
You did not cover how to plant 🌱 and care for seeds and seedlings…not wanting to know how to grow a thriving plant.
That is an ornamental cultivar and completely inedible, it's toxic. Also, approximately 20million people in the US alone have a latex allergy that will be set off by the similar compound in the few edible varieties of passionfruit (which are not in this video). This can cause anaphylaxis and death. I happen to own a nursery and came across this monstrosity of a video while looking for a particular cultivar. Bridgett- this is awful behavior, and you should not be posing as a subject matter expert.
Mine is about 8 months. No signs of flower. Recently I have put more phosphorus fertilizer
Are you making any new videos?
Only 1.....or 2......😅😅😅
Hy
Passion lowers blood pressure. So check with your doctor
Que lastima que es en ingles. No le entiendo
Growing a passion fruit vine in a container is like raising an elephant in a small shed. You probably had to water it 5 times a day or put an all-day dripper into the pot.
Another source on YT prefers to grow his PF in pots to restrict suckers developing. It helps him manage his plants. PF can easily grow 20feet in a season, so not everyone can take on this plant for that kind of real estate, but it doesn’t mean they can’t have one
@@Penguinchubb0 20 feet in a season? I have one that grew 40 feet in all directions in one season. It completely took over half of a very large oak tree. If you want to make a bonsai out of a passion fruit vine, then be my guest, but that's as useless as a wooden frying pan.
Maybe you should of made this video when you had more information
I totally agree! Too many people posts how to without real experience.😒
@@memilli126 I just planned some seed and your info in this video is highly appreciated, thank you
Well this video definitely had more info then the other ones.
Just learned off shoots grow from the roots. And that the leaves and flowers are edibles too.
Definitely potting my passion fruit plant.
*should have
Maybe you should make a video for everyone?
Don't.
It's won't grow big.
Plant it the soil
@0.15.... you look like someone weighing around 60 Kilogram by physical weight.
And then you also said in your 30-35 years of life you had consumed TONS OF PASSION FRUIT.
Am I missing something??? Because I am trying to wonder how much sewage was added post consumption of so much fruit, with end result visible just 60 kilograms while the excretion was way high. 🥴🥴🥴