This Is WHY Your Pakistan Mulberry Is NOT Fruiting!!!

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024
  • Crazy reason why Pakistan mulberry trees around the U.S. are NOT fruiting. And no one is talking about it.... until now.
    USeful Video links:
    Propagate Pakistan Mulberry: • How To Propagate Pakis...
    Propagation update video: • Is Pakistan Mulberry h...
    how to deep water: • Wondering How To Deep ...
    Air Layer any mulberry: • Air Layer ANY Mulberry...
    Potting mixes: • Best Potting Mix To Us...
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    1 gallon pots: amzn.to/3Jsl3Zc
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    bamboo stakes: amzn.to/3FbdinT
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Комментарии • 202

  • @xvolkodavx446
    @xvolkodavx446 Год назад +25

    Wow, the timing of this video couldn’t be more perfect. Trying to figure out why my Pakistani is not fruiting.
    I got it last year in March from nursery, it was already 6’ tall, pretty mature tree. Last year I figured out, that I just missed the season.
    Now after a year in the ground and full of leaves again - not ONE berry!
    I guess red flags should have been last year when I pruned it several times and not one berry popped up. Any other mulberry, even 6-8 months old will sprout at least 1 berry !
    Thank you so much!
    I’ll give it 1-2 more years, because I figure it is about 3 years old now.
    Greta info!

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +3

      our cuttings even fruit without any roots! lol

    • @xvolkodavx446
      @xvolkodavx446 Год назад

      @@qctropicals yeah, mine too - propagating Shangri La and Worlds best - berries before roots, had to clip them off so they don’t suck all the juices and roots can develope

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      @@xvolkodavx446 i keep hearing about this "world's best" variety. Does it beat my green mulberry? 🙃

    • @xvolkodavx446
      @xvolkodavx446 Год назад +1

      @@qctropicals I don’t think anything beats Australian Green/King Shahtoot mulberry for flavor, ripe honeydew is the best!
      Worlds best is Morus alba macroura hybrid, very heavy producer, berries are raspberry/blackberry mix flavor and over 1” in size. Very close to Thai Dwarf variety in shape and size
      Oh and the best thing about WB - it’s everbearing, so you get multiple crops here in Florida. Last berries I had were around Thanksgiving last year

    • @pattistrain4071
      @pattistrain4071 Год назад +1

      I got a large one for mother's day from my son. Full of gorgeous leaves. No flowers.

  • @williambryce8527
    @williambryce8527 Год назад +12

    This video was a little late for me.....I just pulled up my 3 Year old Pakistan mulberry tree, it was huge and never fruited, I pulled this huge healthy tree up this spring... So glad I found you channel, love the honest commentary! The nursery I got it from said nothing was wrong. I just figured it was a male tree. Oh, I live in FL so my mulberry varieties fruit all the time.

  • @parvathitiruviluamala9870
    @parvathitiruviluamala9870 Год назад +8

    Sorry for your losses. It is sad and maddening whem people treat like you don't know what you are talking about. But people who see quality, appreciate your honesty. Don't change ❤

  • @docsaaid2939
    @docsaaid2939 Год назад +6

    We call mulberries shah-toot. Just saying!
    Thanks brother. My knowledge in this aspect increased because of you. Much love and respects from Pakistan!

  • @stuttgartkimmer1
    @stuttgartkimmer1 3 месяца назад +1

    This is SO HELPFUL!! I am an experienced gardener, but my two Pakistan Mulberries have not fruited for YEARS. I was going to just remove the trees, but now I know the reason. Thank you!!

  • @madisonnanda5246
    @madisonnanda5246 Год назад +7

    i have so much respect for you.. You live your life with integrity and you speak the truth. You are a rare human being and we are lucky to have your videos. Many thanks and blessings

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      Thank you! plants and animals made me this way.

    • @gasubtropics
      @gasubtropics Год назад

      @@qctropicalswhere can i buy your mulberry?

  • @quyenphan3981
    @quyenphan3981 Год назад +6

    Thank you so much for the explanation. My tree is 3 years old, strong with healthy leaves....but no fruits! I've been so anxious bc I know other mulberries in my area are already fruiting. I'll wait another year, then.

    • @nunyabiznes33
      @nunyabiznes33 Год назад

      Mine is 9 mos old but not flowering (it's from a cutting bought online). It got water stressed last week and all the leaves dried to a crisp so I took them all off. Then it flowered.
      But now I realized they're all male flowers.😅 I saw a huge tree like on the other end of town that's fruiting and there are no other mulberries nearby. 🤯

  • @alexanderk7638
    @alexanderk7638 Год назад +4

    Appreciate the information. No one else could figure out why they wouldn't fruit. It's been two years now, so hopefully next year it will fruit. Thanks

  • @littlebexarfarm
    @littlebexarfarm Год назад +5

    Absolutely amazing information! I have a white Pakistani mulberry from LE Cooke that has been doing this over the past two years. That tree is over 20 feet tall with a huge trunk too. I always wondered why it’s not fruiting. Again thank you so much for this info.

  • @pescatariangardener
    @pescatariangardener Год назад +5

    Love the wisdom you share. Because of you my guava survived the winter and looks fantastic.

  • @MohsinExperiments
    @MohsinExperiments Год назад +9

    11:09 I am from Pakistan and I planted my Pakistani mulberry tree from a seed. But its leaves are not like what you showed in this picture. Its leaves are very big and like heart❤ shape. However it started flowering the previous year (after 4 years of seedling). But it is a male tree so I grafted it on Feb 15, 2023.
    I never knew the tissue culture and I just came to know it from your video. So, thanks for this wonderful information 💗

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +2

      Some leaves will be heart shape but most seedlings are elongated. All the way from Pakistan!. Is this variety popular in your area?

    • @MohsinExperiments
      @MohsinExperiments Год назад

      @@qctropicals Yeah it is the the most popular variety in Pakistan.

  • @Vegas.Gardener
    @Vegas.Gardener 4 месяца назад +1

    I love it when a video just reads my mind! I was at my wits end pruning, watering, and fertilizing

  • @jacrhin
    @jacrhin 9 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you for posting this video and educating people. I have a Pakistani Mulberry that is huge but not flowering. I’m now looking forward to waiting and harvesting the berries when it’s ready.

  • @sgnetcallsgnetpcg7030
    @sgnetcallsgnetpcg7030 Год назад +3

    You truly are the master of the king of mulberries the "Pakistan Mulberry". Thanks for sharing valuable info- saves years.

  • @andrewpinto1778
    @andrewpinto1778 10 месяцев назад +3

    Thanks for taking the time to share your experience and knowledge and educating the rest of us around the world.

  • @Tutovnik-info
    @Tutovnik-info Год назад +4

    Hey buddy! I'm a mulberry fan from a large, far and cold country (yep, you guess it). I have some plants from different sources, and yes, also Pakistani mulberries in pots. They're quite fast to produce, unlike other mulberries.
    And here's what I found: a mulberry plant usually starts producing fruits on a three-year-old wood, even if it was propagated from a fruiting plant. The buds on it set flowers during winter dormancy period. And when you root a cutting, it is not "zero-year-old", it is kinda "1-year old twig grown on a 5-year-old branch grown on a 20-year-old tree".
    So, I guess, once you propagate it from a root, you "reset" the clock of the wood to zero years.
    But personally I see no a single problem in that. Most trees here (apples, plums, pears, apricots) do not produce until 4-5 years after you've planted them.

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +2

      thank you friend. In today's society, people want instant gratification and do not like to wait :).

    • @Tutovnik-info
      @Tutovnik-info Год назад

      @@qctropicals At least there are two benefits of such a renewal. First, the plant would be disease-free, and next, it will be more vigorous and high. For some it is a good thing.
      I wonder if a plant grown from a bud via tissue propagation would have same behavior as the plant grown from a root piece.

    • @nasimarahman7683
      @nasimarahman7683 Год назад

      Hi , I ordered Pakistan mulberry tree from Amazon and is coming next week. I live in northeast Georgia zone 7, can I plant the tree in the ground or needs to be in pot?

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      @@nasimarahman7683 it grows faster in ground.

  • @lyndatustin9893
    @lyndatustin9893 Год назад +2

    Oh my ! So glad I came across
    Your video I. am in Florida had this property for thirty years. I have bought mulberry trees from big box store. I have made cuttings and grew more trees in my yard.
    I saw a. Video on youtube. talking about. those large mulberrys so I ordered one from etsy..
    A few years ago. Started in a small pot it got a little larger and I finally put in the ground.
    Well It never brought any blooms or fruit. Its out in the garden. Fruit garden . cherry's mangos of different types lemon avacados pineapples figs etc. Well after seeing Your talk about
    Pakastany mulberrys. I see what happened. Thank you😢 You solved my wondering!
    My little tree is still in the garden maybe it will bloom??? We are in the rainy season.
    everything is getting a boost. And all the mulberrys are off the chain!
    There is one thing I may add my mulberries love lots of sun .The fruit is larger and sweeter in more sunny areas. (Same type of mulberry starts) thanks Lynda

  • @NonieK2267
    @NonieK2267 Год назад +1

    My tree fruited the first spring. I planted the fall before. I absolutely love it. I must have gotten the real deal.

  • @susancowan9359
    @susancowan9359 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for the video and for the information. This is my situation and what led me to watch dozens of videos today about Mulberry trees, specifically White Mulberry trees. As far as I know, we do not have any mulberry trees growing in our area, yet approximately three years ago we had a mulberry tree growing on the side of our house. I identified it with a program on my phone called "Picture It" where you take a picture of any plant or tree and the program will identify it... It is a White Mulberry. Because this tree was growing too close to the house's foundation I completely cut it down to the ground. Last year this beautiful tree grew back again even bigger than it was the year before. Now, I still need to get it away from the house's foundation, but what I would like to do is take a bunch of cuttings from it first because as a child I loved picking berries from our trees. The final problem is that in the three years it has been growing (this will be season #3), it has never fruited. My questions for you are these... 1. How did this White Mulberry tree voluntarily plant itself in my yard without human assistance? 2. Is there a way to move the tree as a whole tree without killing it. & 3. Should I even try to take cuttings from a tree that has never fruited? Any help you can give would be appreciated.

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  5 месяцев назад

      1-birds eat mulberries and seeds and carried out in their poop. 2-You will need to dig out as much of the taproot as possible when dormant only. 3-It's most likely a male or fruit may not be as good, only time will tell. You seem to care for this plant and the plant itself seems to really want to survive. I would dig it out and give it a chance at life if it were me.

  • @ZippyCoheny
    @ZippyCoheny 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks, this was so informative. I am happy to find out my trees will bloom and fruit one day because they are already huge-- like 15 foot just in the second year. I was feeling like it would be a shame to have such huge trees that never produce. Thanks again for sharing this information.

  • @TheChenny73
    @TheChenny73 Год назад +3

    I have the same thing. I planted two trees in 2019. I saw a few fruit this year. I thought they are males but I haven’t seen very much flowers. So this is year four. I plan to just leave them alone.

  • @RobertBee-fs8hv
    @RobertBee-fs8hv Год назад +2

    Fruit tree I buy from Lowes are 5 6, 7 years to fruit. Trees bought at Walmart fruit the same season or the second season plum and pear trees much smaller than Lowes trees in both cases I'm talking about potted trees

  • @naturekins604
    @naturekins604 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for doing this video. I have three trees and was wondering what the issue is. I will just be patient. I got mine in Canada so this is obviously happening all over.

  • @dunedainmom
    @dunedainmom Год назад +3

    This explains why my huge PM wasn't fruiting. I was bemoaning it was a male tree, and then this year, it burst with hundreds of fruits. I was stunned. But this makes sense now! Thanks!

  • @CraftEccentricity
    @CraftEccentricity Год назад +2

    Thanks so much for this. I have 3 Everbearing Mullberry 3 years old and not a single fruit. Hopefully next year

  • @steffiejoe
    @steffiejoe Год назад +2

    I purchased mine in 2020. So its been in ground 3 years. I contacted the Etsy seller he claimed it was a cutting after I asked if it was a seedling. I just emailed him and told him I think my Pakistan Mulberry is a tissue culture because it has not flowered or given me fruit. I have 3 other varities which have all flowered a given me fruit.
    I saw a video that recommended beating the tree to get it to fruit. I have not beat mine yet, because I have noisy neighbors who watch me working in my mini food forest.

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +2

      lol, don't beat your tree. It's not its fault. You either got a tissue culture or a seedling. Hopefully the seller is honest enough to at least admit which one he sent you.

  • @mmorales9453
    @mmorales9453 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you so much for your video. Finally, I get an explanation that makes sense…

  • @Joshsmoove
    @Joshsmoove Год назад +3

    Wow. I think I have a tissue cultured mulberry. All the ones at the nursery looked the same. I also pruned it heavily to see if it would set fruit a 3 weeks ago and l though it has leaves now, no fruit.
    Wow just realized this video was posted on my birthday! Lol. Subbed!

  • @carlschnackel3051
    @carlschnackel3051 3 месяца назад +1

    Personally, I really appreciate the information. You obviously have experience with this.

  • @docsaaid2939
    @docsaaid2939 Год назад +1

    Honesty is the only option. Good work bro. Keep it up.

  • @wendyaa4160
    @wendyaa4160 Год назад +1

    its been making me nuts, thank you! i was so close to chopping them down. i will keep waiting :) thanks so much

  • @LuminousTurtle2029
    @LuminousTurtle2029 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for this video. For people like me, who are looking to get trees growing and aren't looking to get fruit immediately, I wouldn't mind getting a tissue cultured tree. However, it's good to know what to look for so I won't expect fruit too soon from them.

  • @premchettri679
    @premchettri679 5 месяцев назад

    Peaceful video now my waiting for almost 6 years with this tree to see its fruit is over and i really thank you for clearing my problem. You are the best with all the basic to advance knowledge

  • @thesarge-
    @thesarge- 13 дней назад

    Thank you for this! It explains a lot.

  • @norfloslotcar
    @norfloslotcar 4 месяца назад

    my third year in the ground and yup its HUGe...finally fruiting this year !!!

  • @Pamsgarden213
    @Pamsgarden213 Год назад +1

    You were right about mine. I bought mine at the "S-O" nursery in Phoenix and it still has not shown any fruit, this is its 3rd year in the ground. I am praying for next year.

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      maybe call them up and ask for a refund or exchange? Any reputable nursery shouldn't have any issues.

    • @Pamsgarden213
      @Pamsgarden213 Год назад

      @@qctropicals , no, not worth the trouble. I do not find him easy to deal with. Since I buy my new stuff from you, I am going to leave it be.

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      @@Pamsgarden213 how big is your yard?

    • @Pamsgarden213
      @Pamsgarden213 Год назад

      @@qctropicals ,
      6,237 sqft-you are the one who did my irrigation and I got my last tree, the Little Ruby fig from. I am in Apache Junction.

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      @@Pamsgarden213 oh yeah I know you! did your pakistan cuttings in the front yard grow and bear fruit this year?

  • @Changing_the_game
    @Changing_the_game Год назад +1

    Thanks for your info. Everyone appreciates it.

  • @LovYou5000
    @LovYou5000 Год назад +1

    Thanks for so important knowledge. Love you bro

  • @oasisoflasvegas7925
    @oasisoflasvegas7925 Год назад

    "you gave it magical juices" *chef's kiss*

  • @RainbowWarriorChris
    @RainbowWarriorChris Год назад +1

    I have a Barbados cherry that was grown from tissue culture and they said it fruits much faster but it's only about 18" tall and it's only in its 1st year so I don't even know but they did say that they fruit faster. But what your saying makes sense

  • @EnlightenmentGarden
    @EnlightenmentGarden Год назад +12

    Informative! Tissue culture figs are similar in my experience. They grow spindly initially and can take 2-3 years to fruit. Not worth it in my opinion for the FMV free aspect as a well taken care of grafted or rooted plant will grow out of it. Plus the lab is not perfect; they make mistakes and can introduce mutations. I stay away from TC .

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +3

      yes tissue cultured figs are about the same but they do tend to fruit sooner. Once we figured out how to propagate them we stopped buying tissue cultured.

    • @margaretmarshall3645
      @margaretmarshall3645 Год назад +1

      Thanks for this video, and both of you, thanks for answering my unspoken question about whether TC figs are the same! I just recently planted a TC Black Madeira and it is thriving. I figured it probably wouldn’t fruit this year, but I guess I will have to accept that it likely won’t fruit next year either. Glad I grafted a Black Madeira onto a different tree last spring, which is really taking off this spring so maybe THAT one will give me a first taste of a Black Madeira fig this fall! 🤞Good to know what to expect when.

    • @nasimarahman7683
      @nasimarahman7683 Год назад

      How long is take Pakistan mulberry tree to fruit from seedlings? Thank you

  • @rarefruit2320
    @rarefruit2320 Год назад +1

    Good lesson thanks for sharing

  • @andrejofak4787
    @andrejofak4787 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks, great info!

  • @SyedHussain-my7ft
    @SyedHussain-my7ft 5 месяцев назад

    I had the same issue with a black pak I bought from eBay that was a tissue culture. This was many years ago. Maybe 5+. I had grafted some of the cuttings from it to a dwarf everbearing just for experiment and after 2-3 years that started fruiting. This is the first year it's fruited so let's see how it goes! Hopefully my main tree produces eventually.

  • @susanparker-heitel702
    @susanparker-heitel702 4 месяца назад

    I have a beautiful mulberry I planted 3 years ago. Beautiful but no fruit- it is supposed to be Pakistan mulberry. I paid well over $100 from a top notch nursery. I have 4 more I bought on eBay - they were supposed to be white mulberry but they just finished fruiting black berries. Awesome flavor. They were 8 inch sticks when I planted them . 2 beside the Pakistan mulberry. One is about 14 feet tall and gave me prolific fat wonderful berries for over a month. The one in the middle gave me about 10 pea sized berries. The other 2 in the back yard are about 10 feet and continue to give medium sized good tasting berries. All bought at same time from eBay . I didn’t pay much so I imagine it was from a back yard propagation. Hopefully my expensive tree will eventually start producing berries.

  • @hog7203
    @hog7203 8 месяцев назад

    Great info. My sister in law has a mulberry tree that appears to be a Pakistan. Extremely long berries, tasty, but not as juicy as the native ones I find on my farm. The wild ones I find vary in taste from tree to tree. Some are bland and some delicious. I knew most seed grown fruits take awhile to mature and fruit but didn't know that tissue culture plants were like that also. I'll have to get some cuttings from her tree and try it out.

  • @phatakanuradha
    @phatakanuradha Год назад +1

    My Pakistan Mulberry plant, when bought from stark Brothers nursery was of fruiting age. It came with the roots. It's been over 10 years now its a big tree. I think it's perfectly healthy growing well. I prune it before every winter. It does have different shapes of leaves so it's not just male tree. It's male and female. But not a single fruit or flower yet.
    What should I do?
    Every year I plan if not fruiting this year then I can cut it down. I have planted another plant too which is about 3 4 years back. It's about 3 feet tall above the ground as deers eat. It's planted just next to this big tree.
    Please guide me. Thanks.I am in Michigan .

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +1

      My guess is you bought a grafted tree and let one of the suckers grow. You no longer have a pakistan but a seedling. It's also probably a male since you haven't noticed flowers as they tend to flower and drop their flowers pretty quickly and sometimes they're small enough you won't notice them unless you looked.

  • @paulcalabrese2034
    @paulcalabrese2034 Месяц назад

    I bought a Pakistan Mulberry from you in March and planted it. It’s been pretty happy all the way up until 2 days ago when all the leaves on the tree burned to a crisp. Ever since planting it’s been getting 3 gallons of water at 6am, 3 gallons at noon and 3 gallons at 6pm plus I hand water in the morning and evening getting it nice and soaked. This week I felt as if I might be overwatering it so I backed off on the hand watering but never touched the automatic watering. The root ball never dried out. Still on Thursday morning the tree was toast (literally). All the branches are still pliable but there’s no new growth (hasn’t grown one bit since planting). Is it dead? I’ve resumed the hand watering. My understanding is that you can overwater the tree? The guava I planted on the same day is growing like crazy and I’ve never changed anything about watering it (it gets the same amount plus hand watering and never dries out). Everything else in the yard is still going crazy like the bamboo and bananas. Any advice? Thanks!

  • @FawziaTung
    @FawziaTung Год назад +1

    Great information! Thank you!

  • @whisperingwinds9964
    @whisperingwinds9964 Год назад +2

    Great info. I’m still trying to figure out why the white Pakistani mulberries are so damn hard to propagate.

    • @xvolkodavx446
      @xvolkodavx446 Год назад +3

      Yeah those are only through grafting
      They do graft pretty easily, especially on everbearing rootstock or tree. I grafted 3 on one 9 month old bush and they have berries this year already

  • @Flcracker0419
    @Flcracker0419 5 месяцев назад

    Makes since now why my mulberry from the box store is not fruiting. All my cuttings are producing, unbelievable!

  • @AwesomeK285
    @AwesomeK285 Год назад +1

    Hi thanks for the info. Do you know how cold hardy is the Pakistan mulberry tree or how cold can it take?

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +1

      unfortunately I do not. But my guess if your soil freezes solid in the winter, this tree may not make it.

  • @Sandra-gk3ct
    @Sandra-gk3ct Год назад

    Arbequina olive trees are not flowering either, they've been in ground and growing beautifully tall for at least 5? years. This is good information, my Vodasta produced ALOT this year after several years in the ground... one mulberry from my Pakistan this year too (wow, huge and tasty but, only one! Voldasta is DELICIOUS) I'm calling it worth the wait.

  • @bosquebear1
    @bosquebear1 7 месяцев назад

    We're seeing the same experience with tissue cultured figs.

  • @violethouseworth5943
    @violethouseworth5943 Месяц назад

    We got the saccades waking up this spring>>>>THEY WREAKED HAVOK ON MY FRUIT TREES......They ate on the stalks till they died off the tree so I have a lot of limbs propagating>>>>I could just twist it off they ate through so much >>>>strawberry trees, mulberry trees>>>>the only trees saved was my black sapotes not sure why but they survived that fiasco....Alll the small seedlings like sugar apples and blackberry jam trees survived because they sat on low ground and I think the black sapotes survived because I had them staked and I think i faked them out on the stakes>>>no pakistan mulberry but i have thought about adding it

  • @jimnaz6281
    @jimnaz6281 Год назад

    Makes sense, I bought a tiny pakistani from another nursery and it didn't start fruiting till 3rd year, I grafted on the 2nd year shangrila and white pakistani both fruit first year

  • @cluck3627
    @cluck3627 Год назад +1

    Thank you brother

  • @oasisoflasvegas7925
    @oasisoflasvegas7925 Год назад

    same experience w/dwarf everbearing. start of year 3, all was good. was definitely a tissue culture...learned something new!

    • @jkim5221
      @jkim5221 Год назад +1

      I grew one from cutting last year but this year it won’t with no fruit. Odd

    • @oasisoflasvegas7925
      @oasisoflasvegas7925 Год назад

      @@jkim5221 I'm not fully convinced that rooted cuttings will always fruit the first few years.

  • @docsaaid2939
    @docsaaid2939 Год назад +1

    Well we Pakistanis whether plant or humans . We like our very own habitat. Our apna elaqa( mean our very own place or area)😂😂😂😅😅😅😅 In Pakistan you'll see mulberries almost in many areas. But due to their stains on roads sidewalks etc. People are not loving them much. I dont know why. Its a great shade providing tree ttoo!

  • @valchris11
    @valchris11 9 месяцев назад

    I have a 25 ft Pakistani Mulberry . Someone complained and then the seller told us that it was tissue culture. I was pissed.
    The tree eventually fruited two yrs in a row , but last yr I trimmed it way down and it didnt fruit this yr .
    I am so pissed. Lesson learnt.
    I dont want another tissue culture plant.

  • @elenilagan816
    @elenilagan816 2 месяца назад

    I was gifted a Pakistani mulberry branch to grow. This is the second year. There are many branches and many leaves. It is very healthy. This cutting was taken from a mature fruiting mulberry. This the 2ndyear of growth, there were only 2 fruits. Is it possible that my tree is from a tissue culture? If so, I’m hoping there will be many fruits next year. If I propagate mulberry once it matures and fruits, will it also take 3 years for the cutting to bear fruits?

  • @BryceGarling
    @BryceGarling 4 месяца назад

    Im breeding pakistan hybrids. The hybrid vigor helps them produce 2nd and 3rd year from culture.

  • @Bonniebrubeckjeter
    @Bonniebrubeckjeter Год назад +1

    We bought a Pakistan mulberry 4 years ago and it hasn’t fruited yet

  • @drthuntclub4153
    @drthuntclub4153 Год назад +1

    OK, I got a interesting scenario for you. I bought cuttings from EBay of ever bearing dwarf mulberries. They where rooted and grown for about 6 months. I then took a scion from a Home Depot Pakistan mulberry and grafted it to the Dwarf rootstock. The tree took off and is now about 7-8 feet tall. It is looking really healthy. I have been pinching the tips so it will branch out more. I was expecting it to produce some fruit this spring but, nothing. I have a ever bearing dwarf next to this one and is about 4 months older and 14' tall. It is loaded with fruit. Both get the same water, sunlight and fertilizer. Do you think I will have to wait very long for the Pakistani to produce?

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      wait until next spring. How many seasons have you been thru with this pakistan?

    • @drthuntclub4153
      @drthuntclub4153 Год назад +1

      @@qctropicals Only one season, I just thought because it being on ever bearing root stock it would produce right away. I am not in a rush. I got 3 of these, two at home and one at camp. I also grafted 3 more a couple of weeks ago and I grafted Pakistan to the ever bearing tree. All grafts were successful and started leafing out.

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +2

      @@drthuntclub4153 that would be a gardening myth homie. Root stock has no bearing on what the scion will or not do.

  • @luvdasun727
    @luvdasun727 Год назад

    Now I’m worried about the one I just got!

  • @rowenadinsmore1
    @rowenadinsmore1 6 месяцев назад

    Someone said you need to prune the tree for the hormones to fruit instead of push for growth.

  • @pierreboyer9277
    @pierreboyer9277 Месяц назад

    I bought a white pakistan in France, it's clearly not from tissue culture, it's like a 7 feet straight branch that they rooted. It has lot of new branches but none of them have any fruits. Is that something usual for a first year?
    My main fear is that they sold me a fruitless mulberry instead of a white pakistan...
    Thanks!

  • @SCPorchGardner
    @SCPorchGardner Год назад

    So why did you choose to mainly focus on Pakistan mulberry trees instead of other species? Thanks

  • @admzad7865
    @admzad7865 5 месяцев назад

    I have a 3 y.o. white mulberry (not Pakistani) that gets a lot of male flowers, but only 2-3 female flowers.
    Is this a male tree? Would it produce more female flowers later?
    Is there any trick to get more female flowers?
    Thanks

  • @naazmj786927
    @naazmj786927 Год назад

    Good information thank you 🙏 so where do I buy plans from any links

  • @guliae.8463
    @guliae.8463 3 месяца назад

    So I bought large one from nursery in Plant city for $80 and 3 years later still no fruits. Thinking of getting rid of it.

  • @marwanelfaysal8427
    @marwanelfaysal8427 Год назад +1

    Hi
    I have Pakistan Mulberry tree that I grew from a cutting .It fruit every year but all the berries fall on the ground without any to mature up .Some berries are as long as 3 inch long ,I am in North Carolina .What can I do to get berries that stay on the tree and mature ,This tree is 12 years old and it did Cary berries from year one

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      some fruit drop is normal. Entire canopy every year for 12 years is not. I would check if there is a problem with the root system. Does the tree look healthy? is it super windy in your area? do you have stuff eating the roots of your plant? 12 years, your tree should be full size 30-50ft tall with a massive trunk.

    • @marwanelfaysal8427
      @marwanelfaysal8427 Год назад

      @@qctropicals Hi
      The tree is about 40 feet high and it look very very healthy and it has big trunk and big roots that branch every where it can move ,Yes some time we have wind but I also have other fruit trees like beach ,apple , pear ,they all give fruit they all live in the same windy condition .The fruit start before the leaves and it start getting a healthy white color berries then it start falling without wind .Thanks for trying to answer me .

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      @@marwanelfaysal8427 are you sure you don't have a male?. Male mulberries will fruit but fruits don't fully develop and drop prematurely.

  • @sheri023
    @sheri023 Год назад

    I didn't get fruit on mine until the 3rd yr and on the fourth it died in a March late freeze. The nursery said they do that in a freeze and to mulch it heavily on new trees when it freezes.

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      They can take a lot of cold until your soil freezes solid though. Where do you live?

    • @sheri023
      @sheri023 Год назад

      @@qctropicals Northern calif. zone 9A. The soil doesn't freeze here, I don't think.

  • @f.18
    @f.18 Год назад +1

    hope you will see my comment
    thank you for this information its help to know what we plant
    could you please tell us or showing how roots move in soil
    Ali from Iraq

  • @sargentpepper8931
    @sargentpepper8931 21 час назад

    Do male trees even exist in mulberries ?

  • @muhammmadahmed9610
    @muhammmadahmed9610 Год назад +1

    Hello! Brother, what is the difference between Pakistani Big Black Mulberry and Big White Mulberry? I want the black variety, but often the market sells the white variety by falsely labeling it. Can you please tell me how to differentiate between the two?

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +1

      friend, black is black and white is white lol!. Otherwise you won't be able to tell just by looking at the foliage, they both look the same when young.

    • @charliemagoo7943
      @charliemagoo7943 11 месяцев назад +1

      I don't expect fruit on any of my trees be they apple,pear,cherry or mulberry until they are 5 years old. I don't expect pecans or walnuts until 10 years or more. Not dissatisfied

  • @4thetruth62
    @4thetruth62 Год назад

    Thank you

  • @knicks252525
    @knicks252525 Год назад +1

    thx for the video I bought one from Shamus of Greenlife last year and mine looks just like the one you showed, Lots of healthy growth but no fruit. Very disappointed

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      At least now you know it will eventually fruit. Hopefully you bought it cheap.

    • @CRlifeisgood
      @CRlifeisgood Год назад

      Interesting. That's where I bought it too , in 2020. Guess I will have to wait.

    • @knicks252525
      @knicks252525 Год назад

      @@CRlifeisgood what size was yours. Mine was about 6-7 feet tall

    • @CRlifeisgood
      @CRlifeisgood Год назад

      @@knicks252525 same

  • @floridahomeandgardeningwit5457
    @floridahomeandgardeningwit5457 Год назад +2

    I just made a video on my channel about my tropical fruit!! I have one mulberry Pakistani tree that grow good, , got new grows but no fruit… 😢😢 I am in florida

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +2

      these trees are sold thruout the U.S. and I wouldn't be surprised if they're not sold internationally. Just gonna have to wait to get fruit.

    • @floridahomeandgardeningwit5457
      @floridahomeandgardeningwit5457 Год назад +1

      @@qctropicals they should advise buyers that there will be no fruit for the next few years..

    • @floridahomeandgardeningwit5457
      @floridahomeandgardeningwit5457 Год назад

      @@qctropicals wondering if you can give me advice on my mango trees..root on one of my mango tree kind of became open / exposed a little. Do I cover it back with new soil? Thank you in advance

    • @cbw6012
      @cbw6012 Год назад

      I have a tree for 4 years now. I heavily pruned it last year and it gave me baby fruits and fell down. I hope I'll get some good size fruits this year.

  • @BONEKRUSHER408
    @BONEKRUSHER408 Год назад

    Lol at calling out the Pakistani specifically. I bought a few tc fig trees from baker creek seeds and they all fruited for me about the second or third year. Around the same time I also bought a tc Pakistani and a dwarf everbearing grown from cutting, the dwarf has fruited every year but the Pakistani has yet to put out a flower. It's been at least 5 years, still nothing.
    I also bought a Brown Turkey fig from Home Depot that I believe is tc grown, it was one of the first trees I got when the gardening addiction kicked in and it hasn't put out a single fruit.

  • @Joel-McConnell
    @Joel-McConnell 4 месяца назад

    I am on year three of a tissue culture Pakistan Mulberry, it is about 8 to 10 ft. tall, about 1-3/4" caliper trunk and still not fruiting..... :(

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  4 месяца назад +1

      longest one I've seen take to fruit is 6 years

    • @Joel-McConnell
      @Joel-McConnell 4 месяца назад

      @@qctropicals Crossing my fingers for year 4! lol! I am also growing it in a pot so that maybe slowing it down some too. I will never knowingly buy a tissue culture plant again! I have a few TC figs as well and they are the worst growers I have out of 30+ types..... :(

  • @carlsouthard6735
    @carlsouthard6735 Год назад

    thank you =}

  • @user-cl9ew4ie4g
    @user-cl9ew4ie4g 4 месяца назад

    I found a neighbor with a huge mulberry tree is there a benefit of having a male and female next to each other

  • @RobertBee-fs8hv
    @RobertBee-fs8hv Год назад

    Your problem with your supplier is repeated in videos or High density University experimental plots . They order sampling with feather branches . And it's a long negotiating process with the wholesale nursery. The research stations wants feathered tree and the wholesalers say they will provide the. And yet when the trees arrive they are not feathered

  • @najahasamarai787
    @najahasamarai787 4 месяца назад

    Hi I live in zone 4b can I bay a Pakistani mulberry trees from you thanks

  • @stevetheamerican9919
    @stevetheamerican9919 Год назад

    Will cuttings from a 3 year old tissue grown tree fruit normally at proper times? Or will it be delayed

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      I haven't tried it but it should readily fruit like any other cutting.

    • @stevetheamerican9919
      @stevetheamerican9919 Год назад

      @@qctropicals thank you, I am going to find out soon once I get cuttings from my tissue culture tree

  • @juliosdiy3206
    @juliosdiy3206 Год назад

    I waited 3 yrs for my male mulberry to flower no fruits so what good does a male tree do?

  • @joekunin
    @joekunin Год назад

    Is this the case for Persian Mulberry as well? I have a 5 gallon, 6ft tall I got from a local nursery, not yet planted, that is growing but doesn't seem to have any flower or fruit. Tangential question but seeing your hoop house brought it up: Where do you recommend keeping young rooted cuttings of trees in containers, in terms of sun/shade? They're awaiting planting but living in pots for now. I'm in Southern California, 3000ft elevation, windy site but lots of sun available too. Thanks!

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      every plant is different but mulberry can be in full sun no problem unless they're in the rooting process. If you just bought your tree you probably missed flowering season, just wait until next year.

    • @joekunin
      @joekunin Год назад

      @@qctropicals That makes sense, thanks. When you say "In the rooting process" do you mean that first year after planting, or after, say, up-potting a rooted cutting? Best to provide it some shade in those circumstances? Thanks for all the fantastic info

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +2

      @@joekunin If it has roots, don't worry about the sun. Mulberry trees are bullet proof once they have roots. I always shade my cuttings as the sun will dry them out.

  • @johnnyphillips9967
    @johnnyphillips9967 Год назад

    Alan, do you have any Shangri-La mulberry trees left?

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +1

      I've been selling them locally. One more month I'll know for sure how many I will in 1 gallon to ship.

    • @johnnyphillips9967
      @johnnyphillips9967 Год назад

      Cool keep me posted. I need one thank you.

  • @fordguyfordguy
    @fordguyfordguy Год назад

    When will you have more mulberries to ship? Thank you.

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      which variety are you looking for?

    • @fordguyfordguy
      @fordguyfordguy Год назад

      @@qctropicals Pakistan and the australian green

    • @fordguyfordguy
      @fordguyfordguy Год назад

      @@qctropicals I think Paki and Aus green but what produces the most fruit?

    • @fordguyfordguy
      @fordguyfordguy Год назад

      @@qctropicals sorry, I thought I responded last night - I think the Pakistan and the australian green?

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      @@fordguyfordguy Should have a few 1 gallons for sale in about a month.

  • @xvolkodavx446
    @xvolkodavx446 Год назад

    I was wondering - if you propagate a cutting from TC tree that hasn’t fruited yet, like mine, will it inherit the same clock and won’t fruit for several years or will it behave like normal cuttings - possibly fruit the very next year or earlier?
    I’ll try it anyway, since my Pakistani doesn’t fruit again this year, I will be pruning it heavily for shape for possible next year production

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад +1

      I know someone who did just that last year. I'm gonna ask her to see if she got fruit from her cuttings this year. Personally, I used all those for root stock.

    • @xvolkodavx446
      @xvolkodavx446 Год назад

      @@qctropicals did you get any more info from her? Very interested

    • @shorttermrental775
      @shorttermrental775 Год назад

      I have the same question about cuttings. I’m in year two with what I think must be a three y/o TC.

  • @charissekile6125
    @charissekile6125 Год назад

    Ty. Was wondering why mine is so huge still no fruit. I'll keep waiting!

  • @jesuswarnedusaboutthem7710
    @jesuswarnedusaboutthem7710 9 месяцев назад

    Do u have an Etsy store. I’m looking for Pakistan mulberry

  • @Xray.71
    @Xray.71 Год назад

    My friend has a huge black mulberry tree I got cuttings from and now the cuttings are about 6’ tall. The parent tree would fruit 2-3x a year! Does that mean I cloned a fruit bearing tree?

  • @madelinedelacruz5949
    @madelinedelacruz5949 Год назад

    Thanks for this…. I guess I bought one of those….😢

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      They're all over the U.S. Nurseries who just buy and resale will never notice.

  • @cluck3627
    @cluck3627 Год назад

    My tree is 15 feet tall ....2 years on the ground.....no fruit

  • @GreatThemeParkAdventures
    @GreatThemeParkAdventures 10 месяцев назад

    I get like 10 mulberries a freaking year. So annoying. I have nothing but distain for my Pakistani mulberry tree.

  • @user-sn1jt5sh2x
    @user-sn1jt5sh2x 6 месяцев назад

    I have mulberry plant over 3 years, I PRUNE them hard, fertilizer, no fruits❤ how do I know, if the mulberry is make or female? They don't tell you, now I DON'T know, if my tree bare fruit or not or what sex is the tree❤ any help I get, I appreciate ❤

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  6 месяцев назад

      you won't know until it flowers.

  • @milhaant786
    @milhaant786 2 месяца назад

    Sorry for your story. But persevere🎉

  • @michaelhearndon6268
    @michaelhearndon6268 Год назад

    I am in zone 6B, but last winter we had low of -20. Do you know if anyone has grown a Pakistani mulberry in southeast Missouri successfully?

    • @qctropicals
      @qctropicals  Год назад

      too cold, it would get destroyed in your area.

    • @michaelhearndon6268
      @michaelhearndon6268 Год назад

      @qctropicals thanks, I was wondering because an online Nursery had it listed as a zone 6 hardy plant.

    • @charlesdevier8203
      @charlesdevier8203 8 месяцев назад +1

      Mid-Missouri new zone 6b. I had 3 Pakistan mulberries inground last winter. Two made it throu that hard freeze; the third died to the ground but grew from the roots. But the leaves on the new growth are small, not at all like the large leaves on the other two. I am going to let it grow and produce berries and find out if they are good to eat. If not good, I will pull it out.

    • @michaelhearndon6268
      @michaelhearndon6268 8 месяцев назад

      @charlesdevier8203
      Thanks, and let me know.

    • @michaelhearndon6268
      @michaelhearndon6268 2 месяца назад

      ​@charlesdevier8203 how have plants been doing?