I love your videos! I am growing a baby Cherimoya myself and these videos help me understand my plant better. In fact, I am growing a lot of common and exotic fruit currently for experimentation. Your video on protecting from ants came in handy when my orange tree was under attack. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and please post more videos! They are fantastic!
Thanks for the video, Alex. We've talked a few times at the Green Scene at the Fullerton Arboretum. I've got about 6 cherimoya trees in my backyard, without any fruit, in Anaheim, so it's about time I learn to do this. Thanks again.
easy deal is to brace the base of the flower with pointer and index fingers, then spread the petals with your thumb, and stick the paint brush with the pollen into/onto the sticky center-cone-fruitlet-of-pistils, and give it a quick swirl. And then yeah, brake a petal tip for indicating pollination.
Thanks for the info! I'll do this to my Atemoya since it always makes flowers but never fruit. My sugar apples are always abundant though. If the blooms on my red sugar apple come at the same time maybe i'll try cross pollinating and see what happens. I love the smell of the annona flowers too. They smell like sweet bananas to me.
Could you please explain to me how to do this process with papayas? And how to you tell if papayas are male or female before they produce fruit? Thanks -Ricky
I love your videos! I am growing a baby Cherimoya myself and these videos help me understand my plant better. In fact, I am growing a lot of common and exotic fruit currently for experimentation. Your video on protecting from ants came in handy when my orange tree was under attack. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and please post more videos! They are fantastic!
Many thanks Alex. Very useful and very clear. A short picture of great value!
thanks Alex for the tips,now i ca enjoy my cherimoya
Thanks for the video, Alex. We've talked a few times at the Green Scene at the Fullerton Arboretum. I've got about 6 cherimoya trees in my backyard, without any fruit, in Anaheim, so it's about time I learn to do this. Thanks again.
easy deal is to brace the base of the flower with pointer and index fingers, then spread the petals with your thumb, and stick the paint brush with the pollen into/onto the sticky center-cone-fruitlet-of-pistils, and give it a quick swirl. And then yeah, brake a petal tip for indicating pollination.
Fantastico! Thank You So much for posting this video. It has helped me tremendously! Thank you! thank you! thank you!
Thanks for the info! I'll do this to my Atemoya since it always makes flowers but never fruit. My sugar apples are always abundant though. If the blooms on my red sugar apple come at the same time maybe i'll try cross pollinating and see what happens. I love the smell of the annona flowers too. They smell like sweet bananas to me.
Thanks for the video..
Nice video!
Thanks a lot for sharing this video.
Thank you!
Could you please explain to me how to do this process with papayas? And how to you tell if papayas are male or female before they produce fruit? Thanks
-Ricky
Thanks!
Why are some cherimoyas red?
where can I get a Cherimoya tree, I live at Rancho Cucamonga...