Thanks to God we have people like you. I am a Kenyan and love farming.Just two weeks ago I did plant 15 breadfruit seedlings sourced from that organisation of Mary of Breadfruit. We are learning alot from you as you wish others have food on the table. May God bless you all.
Hi George, thanks for the questions. Our farmer resources page has production tips on tree care, pruning and more, you can find it here: eatbreadfruit.com/pages/farmerresources. For your second question, we think planting more trees is always a good idea, but it is important to research or ask for guidance on distance to any structures or other plant installations. Different varieties, and pruning techniques, will take up more or less space over time and you want to make sure you don't have to stress the tree out by moving it or keeping it smaller than desired for safety. Hope this helps, please let us know if you have any more questions and keep us posted!
Hi Walter! There are no definitive scientific standards for this statement however there are lots of anecdotal examples which mention different sap amounts during the stages of the moon. Most notably, but not in Hawaiʻi, the "maple sugar moon" is when syrup farmers tap their trees in order to access the best flow of sap to the tap. Short answer is that it it's not scientifically established in research but is something to be considered when harvesting/pruning or other maintenance activities. Hope this helps - thanks for the question!
Hello madam my tree was12yearsold. And the.tree.was not pruning any time. I'm from. Goa. India. Tell. Me solution about these. I. Also. Put. N. P. K. In. Tree. Roots.
Aloha Amresh, thanks for that info. We also saw widespread immature fruit drop in Hawaiʻi this past season and are currently unsure of the cause. Please check out our production guides for info on breadfruit nutrient management as well as common diseases: eatbreadfruit.com/blogs/production-guides Hope this helps and let us know if you have more questions!
Hi Amresh, how old are your trees? We see that breadfruit trees are prone to aborting young fruit to protect themselves when the trees are young, stressed and/or lacking nutrients.
Proper personal protection is essential when pruning! See the full safety checklist in our pruning handbook: cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/2263/2015/files/PruningBreadfruitHandbook_Mar2019.pdf?31
Thanks to God we have people like you. I am a Kenyan and love farming.Just two weeks ago I did plant 15 breadfruit seedlings sourced from that organisation of Mary of Breadfruit. We are learning alot from you as you wish others have food on the table. May God bless you all.
What are your growing pruning and etc tips and suggestions?? Is it wise to plant breadfruit tree nearby house in tropical countries??
Hi George, thanks for the questions. Our farmer resources page has production tips on tree care, pruning and more, you can find it here: eatbreadfruit.com/pages/farmerresources. For your second question, we think planting more trees is always a good idea, but it is important to research or ask for guidance on distance to any structures or other plant installations. Different varieties, and pruning techniques, will take up more or less space over time and you want to make sure you don't have to stress the tree out by moving it or keeping it smaller than desired for safety. Hope this helps, please let us know if you have any more questions and keep us posted!
Thank u for for sharing God bless u
Thank you for watching!
Tide charts for predicting the amount of sap flowing? Is this real?
Hi Walter! There are no definitive scientific standards for this statement however there are lots of anecdotal examples which mention different sap amounts during the stages of the moon. Most notably, but not in Hawaiʻi, the "maple sugar moon" is when syrup farmers tap their trees in order to access the best flow of sap to the tap. Short answer is that it it's not scientifically established in research but is something to be considered when harvesting/pruning or other maintenance activities. Hope this helps - thanks for the question!
@@HawaiiUluCooperative So interesting. So less tidal activity means less sap?
Hello madam my tree was12yearsold. And the.tree.was not pruning any time. I'm from. Goa. India. Tell. Me solution about these. I. Also. Put. N. P. K. In. Tree. Roots.
Aloha Amresh, thanks for that info. We also saw widespread immature fruit drop in Hawaiʻi this past season and are currently unsure of the cause. Please check out our production guides for info on breadfruit nutrient management as well as common diseases: eatbreadfruit.com/blogs/production-guides Hope this helps and let us know if you have more questions!
thanks for the tips !
No problem!
That tip about topping at low tide is mean!
Mahalo for watching!
Nice formaing
Do you guys sell scions for grafting?
We do not currently but please contact us with more info about what you're looking for: info@eatbreadfruit.com
Wow..
Hello sir my breadfruits are falling down raw and yellow when it was small why.
Hi Amresh, how old are your trees? We see that breadfruit trees are prone to aborting young fruit to protect themselves when the trees are young, stressed and/or lacking nutrients.
What's with the bicycle helmet? No pana falling?
Proper personal protection is essential when pruning! See the full safety checklist in our pruning handbook: cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/2263/2015/files/PruningBreadfruitHandbook_Mar2019.pdf?31
Is this Florida?
This is on Big Island, Hawai'i
I wish I could grow these in our climate.
What part of the world your in?