Souveniers

Ooooh loooks yummy Muddy. Now where are the pics of the backyard resort? :wink:

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I’ll need a couple of full time grounds keepers before I have that resort. Oh, and maybe a free construction crew that will provide the also free materials. Until then, I haven’t found a way to take pics of what’s only in my dreams.

Is this from your trip to Puerto Rico?

Yes, indeed. All legally brought home and gladly presented to the Ag inspectors. :slight_smile:

Don’t worry…In spite of my earlier post, I promise I’m not the fruit police, and I never suspected that you didn’t do the right thing. Besides, with there being no customs I wasn’t sure you had to declare such things…though it makes sense.

I hope you had a great trip!

Ha! Ha! I wasn’t thinking you were policing. There’s no customs, but there are ag transport restrictions that I’m happy to comply with, because imperfect though they may be, those inspections and restrictions are in place to protect our ag economy, and all of us from insects and plant diseases. My reply was more in case anyone wondered how I had brought those back with me.

I didn’t even consider bringing mangoes home because they are not allowed due to an insect that bores into their seeds.

hard to see from the pic, but they look like yellow jaboticabas

What’s the plan with the cacao pod? I volunteer to help sprout extra seeds ;-}

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My daughter’s plan is to hand process the seeds to fulfill her hope of eventually making her own cup of cocoa. I can probably convince her to save a few to try to sprout, but I don’t know if I could convince her to give them up. She worked very hard to pick that thing from high in the tree on a steep slope during a thunderstorm in a mountain rain forest. We did bring back and pot up a few cacao trees.

At one place we bought 2 cacao trees, a coffee tree, and a guava tree for a grand total of $11. :smile: Then we spent an evening addressing the indoor challenge of bare rooting them from the volcanic muck of their containers, thoroughly cleaning the plants, and prepping them for transport.

I was really glad that our walk-up apartment had its own laundry room that was an open-air patio with a laundry sink, hose, tiled floor, and floor drain. We still had to lug all that soil outside afterwards and find an appropriate place to deposit it.

Hey Diana, if you have any seed left over from the cacao id love some. They are only viable for a short time and hard to get fresh. We lost our cacao recently and are wanting to start another.

@amadioranch and @smatthew Guys, you know if it were up to me I’d pack a few up and send them right off to each of you. The glitch is that, out of everything we brought back, the cacao and coffee specifically belong to my daughter. They are the only things she brought home for herself. I’ll see if I can talk her out of just a few, but that pod is VERY precious to her. I even tried to find one online to buy myself, so that I could send you some, but didn’t have any luck. I think it’s interesting that coffee and cacao are the first “fruit” trees she’s trying to grow for herself. Talk about a challenge!

Now, if anyone wants to fund another trip there for me - say, in August or Jan - Feb, when I’d be glad to escape here - I’ll gladly attempt to find more pods to share. :blush:

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Hahahaa I dont blame her for being possessive! Thats a very special treat right there. We LOVE the taste of the pulp. No worries…we just use the plants as ornamentals. Its no big deal.

Don’t worry about it. It’s fairly easy to get cacao seeds and/or pods from Hawaii or PR. Montoso gardens sells pods, plus a bunch of people on eBay sell seeds and pods. Just didn’t want them to go to waste. So she’s going to try and ferment the seeds, then process them into chocolate? I know I definitely want to hear the results of that experiment. I hear the fermentation is the hardest part to get right, especially in small batches.

good catch! the basal ones fruit bear fruits sooner than the crowns, apart from being easier to root

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Thanks. I’m happy to say that I knew that. :slight_smile: Plus it’s an interesting and yummy pineapple that I didn’t have here already.

now really curious, what cultivars do you grow? Makes me want to move to a humid, relatively warm state!

My daughter wearing the smile of success as she cradles her golden prize, her cacao pod.

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Muddy, your kids are cute, he said in a noncreepy way.

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Thank you. They all take after their mom. :wink:
;
Looks change with time. I think they have something better than cute going for them; they’re beautiful on the inside. Of all that I’ve raised, or tried to raise, if any crop turned out better than I dreamed, it’s them. :blush:

As an added bonus, every one of them has an interest in growing things!

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Muddy, it is all in the gene and you got it.

Tony