You've got some amazing varieties there and really nice specimens of loquat. Those young seedlings seem really happy in that community pot. I have a Peluche that I'm really hoping will flower for me for the first time this winter, the fruit is supposedly larger than many varieties so I'm excited to see how my plant does.
I'm finding that using community pots has been a space saving shortcut for when I get loads of seeds all at once. There's bound to be many of the weaker seedlings that get choked out by the stronger ones, but probably that isn't a bad thing if I end up with just the strongest survivors. I'm hoping for first time flowers this winter too. Thanks for stopping by!
Wow interesting. Where'd you purchase those different loquat seeds from? Plus when shopping for loquat seeds should they be packaged dry or in damp medium i understand they lose viability very quickly out of the fruit.
Hi Geriann. I haven't bought a lot of loquat seeds, but I did buy some once and remember they were packed in moist medium. Normally I would just try to find some fruit and plant those seeds.
Have you had much luck w fruiting any loquats in ground? We’ve chatted in the past, I’m just on the other side of the narrows bridge. Looking for some hardy citrus or other rare fruiting trees. I’ll email you. Jon
Hi Jon. Unfortunately, my loquat trees haven't made a flower for me yet, and some are over 5 years old. Not sure how long that's going to take. I think the best local resource for buying citrus trees is restoringeden.co/fruit-trees/. Of course, you can also mail order citrus trees to WA since we're not a commercial citrus growing state, so if you go that route, I would suggest madisoncitrusnursery.com/
@@EastsideGardening Thanks you for your recommendations and response. I’ve purchased quite a few from back to Eden, but was looking for some more rare cold hardy varieties. Looks like Madison has what I was looking for. Thanks again for the reply
@@EastsideGardening What citrus have you had luck with in ground? I have a Yuzu, flying dragon and a tri foliate grapefruit that are doing well in ground. Was just wanting to add a few more.
@@yochanontheseeker1942 I dabbled a little with planting a few trifoliate rootstocks in the ground around my house. The trees made it over the winter, just barely, and I came to the conclusion the trees seem to be happier in a container on my patio. I have limited yard space and other species of fruit to try out, so not sure if I'll be bringing in-ground citrus back to my yard in the near future. thanks for stopping in.
Hello,I am a digital marketer. I have three years of experience working in this field in an agency.I have been researching your youtube channel and analysed that you have 280 plus videos in your channel. Your video quality are so good.I really enjoyed it.But due to some specific errors, your channel is not reached to the targeted audience. So that you are not getting viral views, subscriber and likes. If you want, we can discuss about these errors and i can help you to grow your channel. I promise will give you the right advice. I am waiting for your valuable feedback.❤️
Thanks G! Now to play around with them to see what can be done to trick them into flowering and fruiting for me. Probably a mix of keeping them outside for awhile and pulling them into the greenhouse at ideal times.
You've got some amazing varieties there and really nice specimens of loquat. Those young seedlings seem really happy in that community pot. I have a Peluche that I'm really hoping will flower for me for the first time this winter, the fruit is supposedly larger than many varieties so I'm excited to see how my plant does.
I'm finding that using community pots has been a space saving shortcut for when I get loads of seeds all at once. There's bound to be many of the weaker seedlings that get choked out by the stronger ones, but probably that isn't a bad thing if I end up with just the strongest survivors. I'm hoping for first time flowers this winter too. Thanks for stopping by!
Nice plants🌱🌱🌱
Thanks for watching!
Fantastic work 👏
do you have any trouble with those seedlings dying when you try to separate them into their own pots?
Not many die from the process of separating them into individual pots, but I do discard the small unhealthy looking ones.
Wow interesting. Where'd you purchase those different loquat seeds from? Plus when shopping for loquat seeds should they be packaged dry or in damp medium i understand they lose viability very quickly out of the fruit.
Hi Geriann. I haven't bought a lot of loquat seeds, but I did buy some once and remember they were packed in moist medium. Normally I would just try to find some fruit and plant those seeds.
Have you had much luck w fruiting any loquats in ground?
We’ve chatted in the past, I’m just on the other side of the narrows bridge. Looking for some hardy citrus or other rare fruiting trees. I’ll email you.
Jon
Hi Jon. Unfortunately, my loquat trees haven't made a flower for me yet, and some are over 5 years old. Not sure how long that's going to take. I think the best local resource for buying citrus trees is restoringeden.co/fruit-trees/. Of course, you can also mail order citrus trees to WA since we're not a commercial citrus growing state, so if you go that route, I would suggest madisoncitrusnursery.com/
@@EastsideGardening Thanks you for your recommendations and response. I’ve purchased quite a few from back to Eden, but was looking for some more rare cold hardy varieties. Looks like Madison has what I was looking for. Thanks again for the reply
@@yochanontheseeker1942 I've bought a few trees from Madison in the past, and they all have turned out to grow fast and healthy.
@@EastsideGardening What citrus have you had luck with in ground? I have a Yuzu, flying dragon and a tri foliate grapefruit that are doing well in ground. Was just wanting to add a few more.
@@yochanontheseeker1942 I dabbled a little with planting a few trifoliate rootstocks in the ground around my house. The trees made it over the winter, just barely, and I came to the conclusion the trees seem to be happier in a container on my patio. I have limited yard space and other species of fruit to try out, so not sure if I'll be bringing in-ground citrus back to my yard in the near future. thanks for stopping in.
Hello,I am a digital marketer. I have three years of experience working in this field in an agency.I have been researching your youtube channel and analysed that you have 280 plus videos in your channel. Your video quality are so good.I really enjoyed it.But due to some specific errors, your channel is not reached to the targeted audience. So that you are not getting viral views, subscriber and likes.
If you want, we can discuss about these errors and i can help you to grow your channel. I promise will give you the right advice. I am waiting for your valuable feedback.❤️
Fantastic work 👏
Thanks G! Now to play around with them to see what can be done to trick them into flowering and fruiting for me. Probably a mix of keeping them outside for awhile and pulling them into the greenhouse at ideal times.