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Posts Tagged ‘gardening’

You surely couldn’t help but notice our absence. Did you miss us? You know you did. We certainly missed posting and hearing from all of you.

Of course, life continued over the past month, albeit with a few mishaps. . . hence no posting. Amidst the gargantuan feat of watering our property (we live on an acre of land here in New Mexico), Inge unluckily fell and smashed her wrist on a pesky rock which just happened to be out of place where it didn’t belong. OUCH!!!!:( Not an easy fix, as you can imagine. It required surgery to put humpty back together again. But with with the technical brilliance of an outstanding surgeon, who luckily found all the pieces, she will be as good as new before you know it — with the addition of new bionic enhancements in her wrist ;-) But no insurance coverage for any of it, double ouch!!!

Anyway onwards and upwards. Life goes on, new recipes are plentiful, creativity abounds, as does our vegetable garden, which was a first time project this year, and our mystery plant still remains, well, a mystery.

Our previous post on the mystery plant showed the seedling which grew out of a “typical” grocery store variety red-skinned mango. It looked nothing at all like a mango tree, but instead vaguely resembled a strange type of squash or zucchini, but with a really peculiar chemical scent. The leaves also kept turning brown the minute they would form (despite plenty of water, mind you) and even now, after several weeks, the plant has still not grown any larger. All the blossoms immediately died before even opening, and it still fails to thrive. Here is an example of its current sad existence on our kitchen window sill. The blossom you see in the picture is the first one that has shown any promise.

Was it something we said??

After such a miserable failure, what does any normal person do? Go out and buy more mangos. Champagne mangos were the new hot item at our local Costco, so, of course, we just had to see what would come of them. Realizing that this is a different variety, we also wanted to give this plant an opportunity to grow outside. It also came down to a complete lack of space on the window sill. We planted several seeds in one large old pot, and began to water them. Everyday, twice a day, because of our deepening drought, we watered them. And we waited, and waited. . .

Suddenly, after almost a month, and almost having given up hope of ever seeing anything, a tiny seedling emerged. Wow! In the matter of two weeks, it has grown from roughly two inches in height, to its current size seen in the picture below.

Champagne Mango Seedling

Could it be, we actually have a real mango tree on our hands? According to Wikipedia, this seems very likely. This is an image we found of a small mango seedling grown in India.

by Ganguly Biswarup

The similarity is quite striking? Considering that mangos are usually grown in a very moist, or semi-tropical environment — champagne mangos available here are grown in Mexico — we are really interested to see whether our little project can in fact turn into a tree. Living in the high desert with extremely cold winters, this tree, if it survives, will have to become an exotic house plant. Could be interesting if it reaches the natural height of 40 t0 60 ft. and up. Lets hope it’s slow growing.

Have any of you ever managed to grow a mango successfully? What about any other exotic fruit or plants? We would love to hear from you.

Our Little Mango Tree

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Lately it has been rather difficult to post due to the immense heat (in the mid to upper 90′s). Our computers have been literally smoking, and to top it all off, we have been without reliable internet access for the past week, due to yet another internal glitch on the side of our internet provider. Every day we hear yet another story – we lost power to the server, we are unsure as to exactly what the problem is, we are waiting for the correct part, to finally – we are upgrading….!?  Wonder what their story will be tomorrow?!? We sure hope that they can resolve their problems very soon.

Due to the many fires in the vicinity and the immense smoke permeating through the area, we have been unable to run our trusted swamp cooler, as that would drive the smoke even further into the house. The test kitchen has been placed on hold, because, quite frankly, turning on the stove or oven with already excessive temperatures in the house, doesn’t sound promising. Raw food is the only solution and much healthier as well.

As you might have already guessed from previous posts, mangoes are one of our favorite fruits. We picked up a case of mangoes, grown in Mexico, during our last Costco run (their giant walk-in cooler felt so great  ;-) ).  We enjoyed our mango smoothies and mango lassies,  and just plain fresh fruit mangoes,and then decided to experiment with growing a mango tree from one of the seeds. This took us right back to our homeschooling days, where science experiments, in varying stages of development, were sitting on window sills and shelves throughout the house. This particular experiment took off right away but is looking a little sad right now, and curiously doesn’t resemble any mango tree we have ever seen. Zucchini maybe, but mango? Take a look:

Mango Tree Seedling

And here is a closer look at the newly developing blossoms:

Mango Tree Blossoms

After first laying eyes on the emerging leaves and blossoms, we researched this curious looking mango species on wikipedia. Our sweet little plant doesn’t even remotely resemble any of the trees shown there.

Mango Tree

As you can see this fine specimen has completely different looking leaves.

The Botanical Magazine - Mango

In deepening our own research, we learned that the mango belongs to the genus mangifera,  which consists of numerous tropical fruiting trees in the flowering plant family Anacardiaceae and that many cultivars are monoembryonic and must be propagated by grafting, or they do not breed true. The question remains: What has this been crossed with? To us this species appears to be more closely related to a zucchini, cucumber, or pumpkin.

We would love to know what it is and will post updated photographs of our experiment over the next few days. The blossoms might be opening in a day or two. Perhaps there are some curious biologists among our readers who could shed a little light on this for us. We would love to learn. Let us know, by posting below. We welcome any and all thoughts.

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