One of my favorite fruits. Makes the best milkshakes, ice cream, pies, cheesecake, etc. and it’s a winter fruit when little else is available.
@enickasmith4223
Жыл бұрын
I never heard of this fruit. It was great to see your neighbor. ❤🎉😊 Thanks for sharing. My hubby promised to take me to Florida next year. I want to try this fruit.
@figBid
Жыл бұрын
Good video, Paul. Love canistel!
@terra448
Жыл бұрын
I have a Ross Sapote growing in a pot that just fruited. It was good! I let it sit on the counter in a bag for a day before eating.
@sabujephera2680
Жыл бұрын
Your Ross sapote tree seedling or grafted?please reply
@terra448
Жыл бұрын
@@sabujephera2680 Grafted
@victoriarawveganse
Жыл бұрын
Ooohh Iam soo jealous!!!! Thats one of my favourite fruit :D
@NicoleCB
Жыл бұрын
looks yummy
@mwnemo
Жыл бұрын
Do you know some early season varieties? My tree just defoliated in North Florida so will be something that fruits in December to have a chance at getting ripe fruit.
@romanpatterson2489
Жыл бұрын
I recently read some info on the "Growables" website about canistel that can hopefully be of some use to you. They took some data from IFAS/University of Florida where they had compared some canistel varieties and arranged their ripening/harvest windows and other things like fruit size/weight and eating quality into a table of data. According to their data, "Bruce", "Trompo", and "Oro" could be worth a try for you. Their table states that: - "Bruce" can either ripen early (Aug - Oct) or late (Feb - March) - "Trompo" can either ripen early (Sept - Oct) or late (Feb - April) - "Oro" can either ripen early (Sept - Oct) or late (Feb - May). - "Fairchild #2" is described as "year-round". It's also described as a shy producer by other sources of info, but it appears that it can potentially be everbearing if in ideal climatic conditions (guessing that means in more tropical, humid, and consistently warm climates like South Florida or the Keys) - "Ross" is vaguely described as ripening "Fall - Winter" "Bruce" can potentially ripen the earliest according to IFAS. "Trompo" and "Oro" have basically overlapping seasons but either one can potentially ripen before December if conditions are right. If you're in Zone 9a or 9b, I'm pretty sure it's more realistic to assume you'd get the late ripening window rather than the early one, but you never know until you try. "Ross" and "Fairchild #2" could also be worth a try if you're growing in containers rather than in-ground. This is because Growables says that "Ross" is very slow growing/low vigor and "Fairchild #2" is a naturally compact grower. (I believe Fairchild Gardens is the source cited for those particular nuggets of info). The downside to "Ross" is that it's more susceptible to cold damage than other canistel varieties and you'd be required to protect it from cold every winter. For "Fairchild #2", it allegedly does much better health and productivity-wise in a more tropical climate compared to a marginal or temperate one. Cold protection would be little to no problem if grown in containers though, since you can just bring your tree indoors during cold snaps. Even then, you could still probably grow either of those varieties outdoors or in-ground as long as you give them enough cold protection. Hope that helps and that you have success with growing canistel.
@mwnemo
Жыл бұрын
@@romanpatterson2489 thank you so much! Very helpful
@rubengorospe939
Жыл бұрын
We called chesa in the Philippines
@VincentsfamilyCali
Жыл бұрын
I 👍canistel
@valerieescabi6104
Жыл бұрын
Shalom 💖🙏🏻
@47nodoubt
Жыл бұрын
why do you not have citrus bro
@warw
Жыл бұрын
Personally, I don't either, Citrus is likely to get citrus greening here and I don't want to have to deal with a tree being useless after ive cared for it for so long. It's a factor in the decline Florida's citrus industry years ago.
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