if you don't know what he's doing he's cutting the roots to stress the plant. and that makes male plants turn into females because if the plant thinks it might die it wants to guarantee that it can reproduce so it switches genders so it can fruit. anything that damages the plant without killing it will make male plants turn into females.
My grandparents are farmer. They have lots of experience and knowledge about plantations. They told me that all the papaya's has two kind of seed inside, brown and dark black. Those brown seeds are male papaya and black are female.
Gr8 video. I remember we had 1 papaya tree near our house and we left it to grow until it started its 1st flowering, we then discovered it was a male plant. My husband got his cane knife and cut it off about 1 and half foot from its base. It didn't die, but out of that stump grew 2 new strong branches so we left it as is. Not long after they started flowering and they were both female branches and we had a bountiful harvest of papayas from that single tree with 2 branches, even shared them with the houses around us, its leaves for dengue and tender young ones for asthma attacks,,etc. both branches laden with so much fruits for different dishes....and to think we had it cut down, tsk, tsk, I went and apologised to it🙄 and thanked it for its many beneficial uses.😁
Thanks so much -- ** I'm finding that I'm learning more from the comments here than I actually learned from the video. It sure would have been nice to see what happened to these plants, although maybe it's posted and I just can't find it-thanks to everyone commenting as I'm learning so much from the comments and the video was a decent start ... But the comments really have me excited about planting papayas here in Panama. I missed last planting season because everyone I offered to hire to do this just never showed up ... And since the same thing is starting to happen again this planting season-even though I'm severely disabled, I'm going to give it a try myself-big smile
Long ago I have read a very experienced papaya farmer to id the very young seedlings from their genders, he said the roots type is very different that you can tell them since very young in the farm. The male one only have one main thick long root and the female ones have several separate roots, just like these seedlings in the film! I also learnt the male ones do fruit sometimes but not as tasty. -- here just to share what I learnt with those gardeners who are interested in growing them from seeds! :) Like all farmers they will only keep the strong, fast growing seedlings! Once my close neighbor who grew a female papaya in a pot in her 2nd floor balcony, only about 2'+ and able to bare quite many fruit, I was impressed! She just kept to compost the kitchen scrap into the pot.
I was not aware of the fact the male plants have one main big tap root. I have transplanted some of my seedlings and they all had one main tap root. I am curious now if all those plants are males. If so they won't give fruit. Will have to wait till warmer weather and see if all flowers just drop off. If so will have to cut the trunks off low to see if I they will change to female plants. Good information.
@@hayesweggeman7069 Papaya is a funny plant. The seeds of male usually in the 1/3 of the fruit near stem (trunk) but you could injure it on purpose by poke through the trunk near low part of the leaves with a thick woody rod or two once you sure the plant is male. By doing this, the male plant would like to produce fruit before it dies by changing the gender. It can still flower and fruit then just won't be as many and as tasty as normal female. The 2/3 of the papaya fruit seeds, the most of them would be female.
@@janemyfoodandflowers7726 Thanks for the feedback Jane. I will wait till summer to see if my papaya plants bear fruit. They are still young plants but they are flowering.
@@SokhaChetra not true you don't reply to every question they have ask you I answered some of them for you practice what you preach thanks for the video
Wow it's nice to know this. Since I was planting papaya before and doesn't gave much fruit. They said it was male. It was completely waste of time for me. So I had to cut them lol. Thanks for sharing.
It might also be good to add that the root of a male is one straight tap root and the female has two branching off. Many times I just plant all my seeds and when they are still small I will pull them out and look at the roots and discard the males.
All papaya seedlings, regardless of sex grow one tap root and four laterals. The tap root will grow deep into the ground and keep the plant able to withstand strong winds. The tap root also grows deep to search for water below the ground. The lateral roots develop fibrous roots that search for nutrient, etc. And may help anchor the plant down and keep it stable.
@@Dencioize your particially right but only males have one main tap root which is how you can distinguish the male from female. Believe me I learned this in Thailand when I lived there and have been successful my whole life on this teaching people about plant propagation techniques.
Thanks for sharing the information I got more than 15 plants n most of them were male only 3 r female now I know how to go for d right seed Thanks God bless you v
Wow what a very imformative tapes of sharing good ideas, how to choose the lady seeds of papaya.. thanks alot of sharing and teaching us very effective tapes, I love papaya, each one of our favorites fruits, so healthy. God bless👍👍💖💝🙏🙏😇😇
@@SokhaChetra we know from beginning that black seeds is female and grey seeds mala. Bye pkdatta calcuta india. If you have good quality pappya seeds. Pl send me some female seeds to me. Bye my name is pkdatta. 88/4baburam ghosh road.calcutta. India. Bye thanks.
Thank you for the info.honestly i didin't Know how to classified the male and female until it grows and bear fruits. Also by cutting the roots is my first time to know about it.
When knowledge is giving to you for free, the teacher can take the time, he/she considers necessary. Up to you to keep watching or move to other channel. At least as a normal and grateful person, you could drop a good comment.
Thanks for nice video. We had one hermaphrodite papaya tree at home. It had male and female flowers on same tree. Fruit was sweet, tasty with nice smell.
I know getting female plants was a hard examination even when we are getting it from reputed nursery. Your demonstration is a way good information. Thanks for sharing. Some people I think don't have basic idea and giving stupid comments.
I tried to cut my root too ... and it works . I am a female beautiful transgender now ... therefore , cutting root could transform gender. Happy planting to all ...
@@MrCretemaniam I have heard that the damage “frightens” the plant, making it think it might be in danger of not surviving, thus it had better produce offspring for survival of the species.
@@MrCretemaniam I think you're right. Trying to figure out which of the papaya seedlings were female or male but after reading your comment, I understood why he's cutting the main roots. Good analogy LMAO
@@karenramnath9993 but do plants think? or do they have thinking or reasoning faculty as humans? I would rather take that as superstition but the logic or science for the resultant genotype change is what I can't fathom right now. Thank you anyways.
@@abimbolapaulagboola6360 It's not really "thinking" as such but nature's way of ensuring continuity of a species. It's similar to what happens with the acacia plant when a giraffe starts chewing on it, the neighboring ones produce some chemical in the leaves that is very unpleasant to the giraffe.
Good pointers on growing successful papaya trees. I have many trees planted but they are young. I am hoping that by next summer I will get fruit. The plants are flowering but it is really too cool at nights right now.
@@SokhaChetra Thanks for sharing. I have learnt a lot from this video and other persons experience. I cut the roots of my papaya before i planted 4 months ago. It's growing short and has male flowers. I'm very disappointed. Should i cut it down now.
I saw from an Indonesian youtube channel, the papaya farmer gv a tip that to make sure we get female papaya trees, we shd divide the papaya into 3 equal parts horizontally. Then only take the seeds from the middle part. Those are the female trees seeds. I've never tried this though.
Awesome video. Very informative, great insights easy to follow. Thanks. Would be great to see what happen with those plants a year later :) please keep us posted. Peace ✌️
thank you so much for the video. Now I will be sure that the papaya that I will be planting in our yard will surely give me fruits. Thank you so much for the info.
I wish I watched this video before. We ate a papaya we bought from the market and I liked it so much and scattered the seed s in the compound they all sprouted and I chose one good one and removed the rest .. Now the plant has grown into a big tree and has not brought any papaya fruit. They said its a male. Now please is there anyway I can make it bear fruit. Could it be turned to bear fruit or do I cut it down? What a shame it I need to cut the beautiful tree down. Someone help please any idea?
Great Video ..Thanks so much for the coaching ...At the beginning of the , I saw that your Papaya also can bear fruits planting inside the plastic bags ? Your reply is highly appreciated...Awesome ...
Thank you so much for this information. I have 6 payapa trees. 4 have nothing on them but blooms should I take them up. The other two have 3 payapas but growing very slow. Is there something I should be doing to them? I use a citrus fertilizer.
It seems like a stress or shock that causes the flower to express hermaphroditic parts (male and female) so that fruit is assured. Stress or shock can cause this in other nornally diaceous (male or female) plants. Its a survival mechanism like lettuce "bolting", or flowering early, due to the shock of high heat conditions. It ensures the next generations survival more than the regular mode if the plant exists in an undisturbed healthy stand with neighbors in the same generation.
You are right...the selection of male and female process is not clear.Cutting the roots may not justify the sex.single tap root in other videos shows the difference.Female has a lateral side root plus the tap.I have experiment it and they are right so far.
Thank you for your video. I just purchased 2 trees about 14 inches high. I'll Check them tomorrow and give them the snip. They are my first two, so do you think i should leave one as male if i have one? This is very encouraging. Thank you so much. And also thanking everybody for their knowledge also.
The papaya has a main, tap root that grows deep into the ground. It keeps the tree strong to resist winds. It has 4 lateral roots that keep the trunk growing straight and stable. Eventually it grows fibrous roots necessary for water and nutrient uptake. If the tap root is cut or damaged, its role in anchoring the plant is taken over by one or two of the lateral roots resulting in a bent trunk, the bend appearing opposite the direction of the lateral root that took over. True, the papaya will produce roots to replace the lost ones but fibrous roots cannot support the tree especially if heavily laden with fruits. Strong winds will easily topple it down.
When you cut the tap root, the plant grow shorter and have thicker trunk, hence don't have to worry about strong wind. Strong wind will topple tall papaya tree not the shorter one... One note : Commercial farmer don't do it, hermaphrodite seeds is used instead and the female plant are discarded.
@@JohnSmith-nz2yq that's right! Don't cut the tap root. The plant will grow tall and strong. Cutting the tap root does not make it grow a bigger trunk, and fibrous roots aren't strong enough to keep the tree upright in strong winds.
Why do you snip the main roots? I didn't snip mine when I transplanted it. It's doing fine and fruiting/flowering now. Thank you for your video, very good demonstrations.
@@qwenethnguyen3252 Oh, ok. Thank you so much! Do you have any suggestions on protecting the flowers on the plant? Something is eating my flowers before they bloom and even after blooming! I have no idea what is eating them off.
if you don't know what he's doing he's cutting the roots to stress the plant. and that makes male plants turn into females because if the plant thinks it might die it wants to guarantee that it can reproduce so it switches genders so it can fruit. anything that damages the plant without killing it will make male plants turn into females.
Thank you so much .... this explains an awful lot.
Only this information is useful. Other parts of the video not useful.
wow well presented ❤
He did not show the main root
Thanks for the explanation
My grandparents are farmer. They have lots of experience and knowledge about plantations. They told me that all the papaya's has two kind of seed inside, brown and dark black. Those brown seeds are male papaya and black are female.
Thank you for sharing !!!
@M Patel I don't think so, the plant will have both male and female flowers. And the bees will do the job. I guess. :)
My mom also told me like this.
Interesting!
Interesting!
Gr8 video. I remember we had 1 papaya tree near our house and we left it to grow until it started its 1st flowering, we then discovered it was a male plant. My husband got his cane knife and cut it off about 1 and half foot from its base. It didn't die, but out of that stump grew 2 new strong branches so we left it as is. Not long after they started flowering and they were both female branches and we had a bountiful harvest of papayas from that single tree with 2 branches, even shared them with the houses around us, its leaves for dengue and tender young ones for asthma attacks,,etc. both branches laden with so much fruits for different dishes....and to think we had it cut down, tsk, tsk, I went and apologised to it🙄 and thanked it for its many beneficial uses.😁
Wonderful experience , and thank for sharing
Hi oh
How do you use the leaves for asthma?
@@BeckyCantu q
How do you use papaya leaves for asthma?
Thanks so much -- ** I'm finding that I'm learning more from the comments here than I actually learned from the video. It sure would have been nice to see what happened to these plants, although maybe it's posted and I just can't find it-thanks to everyone commenting as I'm learning so much from the comments and the video was a decent start ... But the comments really have me excited about planting papayas here in Panama. I missed last planting season because everyone I offered to hire to do this just never showed up ... And since the same thing is starting to happen again this planting season-even though I'm severely disabled, I'm going to give it a try myself-big smile
Detailed comment . Really appreciate 😊
Fear Allah
@@SokhaChetraAllah is almighty
My trainer also teach us about these technique in Cambodia. Thank for sharing . May God bless you.
it is great to hear that
Awesome!!
@@SokhaChetra any way I can get seeds from you guys? God bless!
Any way I can get seeds from you guys? God bless! 🙏🌱🌻😎👍
Yes I have tried this method and it works now am going to make a little papaya walk thanks! For the information
it is my pleasure
From Zimbabwe. Thanks a lot. The information makes the nation rich.
Thx for support ❤️
Long ago I have read a very experienced papaya farmer to id the very young seedlings from their genders, he said the roots type is very different that you can tell them since very young in the farm. The male one only have one main thick long root and the female ones have several separate roots, just like these seedlings in the film! I also learnt the male ones do fruit sometimes but not as tasty. -- here just to share what I learnt with those gardeners who are interested in growing them from seeds! :)
Like all farmers they will only keep the strong, fast growing seedlings! Once my close neighbor who grew a female papaya in a pot in her 2nd floor balcony, only about 2'+ and able to bare quite many fruit, I was impressed! She just kept to compost the kitchen scrap into the pot.
appreciated your detailed feedback
I was not aware of the fact the male plants have one main big tap root. I have transplanted some of my seedlings and they all had one main tap root. I am curious now if all those plants are males. If so they won't give fruit. Will have to wait till warmer weather and see if all flowers just drop off. If so will have to cut the trunks off low to see if I they will change to female plants. Good information.
@@hayesweggeman7069 Papaya is a funny plant. The seeds of male usually in the 1/3 of the fruit near stem (trunk) but you could injure it on purpose by poke through the trunk near low part of the leaves with a thick woody rod or two once you sure the plant is male. By doing this, the male plant would like to produce fruit before it dies by changing the gender. It can still flower and fruit then just won't be as many and as tasty as normal female. The 2/3 of the papaya fruit seeds, the most of them would be female.
@@janemyfoodandflowers7726 Thanks for the feedback Jane. I will wait till summer to see if my papaya plants bear fruit. They are still young plants but they are flowering.
The male papaya fruit is tasty sometimes better than the female papaya....from kenya
What I'd love the most is..he replied every viewer's Questions. I have come across there are many youtubers they don't bother to reply back.
I myself feel unpleasant when comment on other people's video,but get no reply. So, I don't want u to feel the same
@@SokhaChetra not true you don't reply to every question they have ask you I answered some of them for you practice what you preach thanks for the video
@@JoseGonzales-ul9sv sorry about that. i can't answer all the questions asked
Wow it's nice to know this. Since I was planting papaya before and doesn't gave much fruit. They said it was male. It was completely waste of time for me. So I had to cut them lol. Thanks for sharing.
The leaves are good
Hello l have some papaya trees which are male didn't give fruit wiil please help me what to do
It might also be good to add that the root of a male is one straight tap root and the female has two branching off. Many times I just plant all my seeds and when they are still small I will pull them out and look at the roots and discard the males.
Thank for feedback .
All papaya seedlings, regardless of sex grow one tap root and four laterals. The tap root will grow deep into the ground and keep the plant able to withstand strong winds. The tap root also grows deep to search for water below the ground. The lateral roots develop fibrous roots that search for nutrient, etc. And may help anchor the plant down and keep it stable.
@@Dencioize your particially right but only males have one main tap root which is how you can distinguish the male from female. Believe me I learned this in Thailand when I lived there and have been successful my whole life on this teaching people about plant propagation techniques.
And also to make a dwarf papaya just tip the top of any papaya plant and all growth will be concentrated on fruit production other than plant growth.
Also you can tell by seed which ones will be female by only choosing the darker seeds which have a higher female germination rate.
Wow ganito pala ang paraan. Thanks for sharing.
A new Idea get. I will try it immediately.
Thanks.
M.naskar
Thanks for sharing the information I got more than 15 plants n most of them were male only 3 r female now I know how to go for d right seed Thanks God bless you v
it is great to hear that . Cheer from Cambodia
Watch videos on how to turn them from male to female before you cut them down and throw them away
Ko
Wow what a very imformative tapes of sharing good ideas, how to choose the lady seeds of papaya.. thanks alot of sharing and teaching us very effective tapes, I love papaya, each one of our favorites fruits, so healthy. God bless👍👍💖💝🙏🙏😇😇
My great pleasure
Is there any difference between black and grey seeds. Because we know that black seeds is female and grey seeds mala seeds. So pl fb. Bye
@@pradyutdatta7269 test it because i'm not sure about it bro
@@SokhaChetra we know from beginning that black seeds is female and grey seeds mala. Bye pkdatta calcuta india. If you have good quality pappya seeds. Pl send me some female seeds to me. Bye my name is pkdatta. 88/4baburam ghosh road.calcutta. India. Bye thanks.
thank you sa pag se share..now ko lang nalaman na ganon pala ang pag pili ng female papaya.Gpd bless🙏🙏
My pleasure,
Greetings from Sri Lanka !
Very useful information!
Great to hear from. U
Thank you so much sir.It is a highly useful video. God Bless you sir. / From Sri Lanka,
Big thx for support ❤️
A very good video thank you
Salamat sa pagtuturo mo, sa paraan ng pagtatanim ng papaya.
Maraming salamat!!!
God bless you and your
Family!!!
You have thought me something I've always to know how to get my papaya bearing fruit. Thanks to you
Thank you for demonstration to the choice best papaya seed 👍
Love from Indonesian
WOW 🤩
Your papaya trees got lots of fruits 👍🤩
We try to grow papaya trees in Melbourne
Hard to grow 🙃
Thanks for sharing 👍
Now I get new info... Thanks... I love papaya also.... Hope I grow another tree of this.... I got one who's bearing fruits this time...good luck to us
Behind Ph nice to hear from you
Hi, how long has it taken for the papaya to fruit?
Around 9 to 11 months
@@SokhaChetra can you tell me how to fertilize these trees?
To watch Papaya grow, your video was the most helpful of all the videos so far. Shared very good knowledge.😊
Loved this video, i have bens unfortunate to be growing only male papaya tress for a while now. Time to get the female ones
I'm farmer too thank you for sharing this idea. I will do this instruction
Thank you very much.I've learned how to select the female papaya
Very nice and effective video is. Waiting for next video. Thank you so much. Go ahead. From kolkata.
Thank you for the info.honestly i didin't Know how to classified the male and female until it grows and bear fruits.
Also by cutting the roots is my first time to know about it.
Thanks for sharing! I love papaya. Papayas is my favorite,thank you so much 👍🏼👍🏼 I’m going to try it 2/19/20
Nice to hear from u
Update bro
how did it go?
Amazing farm work, I love papaya fruits, nice work my friend 👍👍👍
Time is precious.
All this could have been shown in 2 minutes.
Great things take time
When knowledge is giving to you for free, the teacher can take the time, he/she considers necessary. Up to you to keep watching or move to other channel. At least as a normal and grateful person, you could drop a good comment.
Thanks for sharing this tip. It’s a big help since I M going to transplant my papaya tomorrow
Thanks for sharing! I’ll try this out in my papaya potting project! 🎉🎉
Good luck! Let me know how it goes.
The project is in progress, IT is difficult to create self-Media! Anyway thanks for your concern!
Thanks for nice video. We had one hermaphrodite papaya tree at home. It had male and female flowers on same tree. Fruit was sweet, tasty with nice smell.
Oh that's nice. Is it possible to marcot hermaphrodites?
thanks for sharing
Thanks for a great video! How big will the papaya tree be or how old, when you can tell if you were successful in making it female?
I shall soon try growing my own papaya tree in my terrace. Thank you for tips👍
My pleasure 😘
I love papaya but don't know how to grow it... thanks for sharing.. new friend here watching...
Sir what's the reason for cutting the roots please clarify my doubt and yy should we take lower part of seeds nice video 😊😊☺️☺️
Inorder to make the secondary roots grow faster for nutrients uptake from the soil and also for the papaya tree to grow shorter.
Ah I see, thank you for letting me know, and thank you for the video, I am now.lookung forward to doing this to my papayas. Thank you.
I know getting female plants was a hard examination even when we are getting it from reputed nursery. Your demonstration is a way good information. Thanks for sharing. Some people I think don't have basic idea and giving stupid comments.
It is great to hear from u ❤️. Again big thank for thump up
Wow I know now steps how to plant Female Papaya,salamat po.
You are welcome
Sir Very easy and simple method. I will try at home
nice to hear that Beautiful life
Information is so good N I want to know on how to know or separate a male or female papaya
Thank you for giving me answer
Arun Khumukcham putting water some sink and some don't.
@@allisonclarke1017 you mean if it sink that is was a female papaya?
Wow never knew that !!!
so much 😊
Also the comment section ...very formative. 😊
Blessings from S.A.
You are most welcome! Let me know if you have any questions.
@@SokhaChetraThe project is in progress, IT is difficult to create self-Media! Anyway thanks for your concern! Reply to you later! 🎉❤
I tried to cut my root too ... and it works . I am a female beautiful transgender now ... therefore , cutting root could transform gender. Happy planting to all ...
No
How is it so. I had about 5 male pappaya, can I convert it into female, at what ever cost. Please give a reply.
Ppppppp0
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
This video helps us new to planting. Thanks!
Thanks for the video. I have tried it, and it works. Greetings from The Bahamas
Glad it helped
What if you select only darker seeds from inside the fruit because people claim the darker ones are female
This is an eye opener. Learnt something vitally important regarding papaya young plant roots cutting. Tnx frm Nigeria.
It is great to hear from u
@david grinnell plz Google it. It's archaic n cld be used. So it's an English word.
Thank you for sharing... From Sri Lanka..🇱🇰😍
i would like to know why we have to cut off the main roots?does it help in making the plant a female?
Yes it is a form of castration. Just kidding.
@@MrCretemaniam I have heard that the damage “frightens” the plant, making it think it might be in danger of not surviving, thus it had better produce offspring for survival of the species.
@@MrCretemaniam I think you're right. Trying to figure out which of the papaya seedlings were female or male but after reading your comment, I understood why he's cutting the main roots.
Good analogy LMAO
@@karenramnath9993 but do plants think? or do they have thinking or reasoning faculty as humans? I would rather take that as superstition but the logic or science for the resultant genotype change is what I can't fathom right now. Thank you anyways.
@@abimbolapaulagboola6360 It's not really "thinking" as such but nature's way of ensuring continuity of a species. It's similar to what happens with the acacia plant when a giraffe starts chewing on it, the neighboring ones produce some chemical in the leaves that is very unpleasant to the giraffe.
Wow this video is awesome! Thank you dearly for the knowledge. I am definitely not a Bot 🤖
Good pointers on growing successful papaya trees. I have many trees planted but they are young. I am hoping that by next summer I will get fruit. The plants are flowering but it is really too cool at nights right now.
Best of luck!
great video, thanks for sharing.
what was the reason for cutting the main root, could you please explain the purpose.
to make the plant short and change gender to female
@@SokhaChetra Thanks for sharing. I have learnt a lot from this video and other persons experience. I cut the roots of my papaya before i planted 4 months ago. It's growing short and has male flowers. I'm very disappointed. Should i cut it down now.
I saw from an Indonesian youtube channel, the papaya farmer gv a tip that to make sure we get female papaya trees, we shd divide the papaya into 3 equal parts horizontally. Then only take the seeds from the middle part. Those are the female trees seeds. I've never tried this though.
I think all the seeds arenot all female using that way.
JL
I’m a small farmer too I love the way you plant so knowledgeable for all 😘
Nice to hear from you ☺️
@@SokhaChetra new friend here
@@SokhaChetra connected here
Very informative and u did it very carefully thank you but i would love to see how you planted
Thank you for feedback
Clear demonstration for every textual instructions. Thank you
Big thx for support from Cambodia
Very informative and helpful for papaya growers
very informative vedio demostration clear thank you sir expect more from you about Pappaya ....👌..
Glad it help 😘
When should we plant the seeds what weather and season or timing or climate is better for this plant
Spring...
Awesome video. Very informative, great insights easy to follow. Thanks.
Would be great to see what happen with those plants a year later :) please keep us posted. Peace ✌️
True
Yeah Right This is Awesome 👍 Love It.
Thank you now I know. Msg from Philippines 👏👏👏
Happy to help
thank you so much for the video. Now I will be sure that the papaya that I will be planting in our yard will surely give me fruits. Thank you so much for the info.
it is my pleasure .
I wish I watched this video before. We ate a papaya we bought from the market and I liked it so much and scattered the seed s in the compound they all sprouted and I chose one good one and removed the rest .. Now the plant has grown into a big tree and has not brought any papaya fruit. They said its a male. Now please is there anyway I can make it bear fruit. Could it be turned to bear fruit or do I cut it down? What a shame it I need to cut the beautiful tree down. Someone help please any idea?
easier to grow new ones...
or you add fruit fertilizer to the one you have... hopefully it bear fruits..👌
You need male and female to bear fruit so keep it and get a female
Usually nobody showing how and what seeds will germinate. You shown this usefull tips.
Love and gratitude from India 🙏🙏🙏
The way of collecting seeds and planting is wonderful and scientific.
big thank for support
@@SokhaChetra T
Lovely .. impressed to know the simple step which are so worthy.
It is very nice of you 😊
Thanks, I didn’t know about that and I love planting 😘
Thank you very much for the information. Just learned from you the technique of cutting the main roots.
My pleasure 😊
Great Video ..Thanks so much for the coaching ...At the beginning of the , I saw that your Papaya also can bear fruits planting inside the plastic bags ? Your reply is highly appreciated...Awesome ...
So nice of you
Thanks for the knowledge you've shared to us, more power..
Nice to hear from u ❤️
@@SokhaChetra by de
Hxcvlh
Now I remember my father's guides in choosing female papaya seeds. They are actually same as yours. Thank you for this guide. 😊
Nice to hear yr feedback 👍
इसकी जडे काटनेसे क्या लाभ होता है.
Thank you so much for this information. I have 6 payapa trees. 4 have nothing on them but blooms should I take them up. The other two have 3 payapas but growing very slow. Is there something I should be doing to them? I use a citrus fertilizer.
@Ferne scully floweing plant are male they wont produce fruit
Cheers so much, great demonstration indeed, very clear and precise 😊❤ I never knew and will try
Glad it was helpful!
Thanks a lot for your information it's so timely.
GOOD INFORMATION. PLEASE LET ME KNOW THE REASON FOR CUTTING THE MAIN ROOT. ( ALSO WHAT WILL HAPPEN IF THE MAIN ROOT IS NOT CUT.)
I think it stops further downward root growth. Just like pruning the top of a plant.
Ganyan Pala Ang pagtatabim Ng papaya .thanks for sharing
it is my pleasure brother
Thank you so much for teaching us the best way of a fruitful papaya. I like it's fruit which has too many uses.
Nice to hear from u
@@SokhaChetra àaaàqàà
I must try this.Its right on time.Thanks, and lots of love from Kenya.
Welcome from Cambodia
Tuko wengi 😊
What kind of spray do u the papaya with to prevent disease
in my experience, preparing a good start is the key. i refer to soil preparation process
May I know why you choose more denser seeds as healthier ones? And also any reason behind cutting out main roots?
To make sure it's a female
Denser seeds are mature, those that float are immature and will probably grow weakly.
This applies to many species. Floating seeds don't germinate as a rule!
Can you tell me about how cutting the root makes it female. Does this work for all fruit trees?
You keep the papaya trees in that bag with dirt you don't plant them in the ground is that correct?
It seems like a stress or shock that causes the flower to express hermaphroditic parts (male and female) so that fruit is assured. Stress or shock can cause this in other nornally diaceous (male or female) plants.
Its a survival mechanism like lettuce "bolting", or flowering early, due to the shock of high heat conditions. It ensures the next generations survival more than the regular mode if the plant exists in an undisturbed healthy stand with neighbors in the same generation.
You are right...the selection of male and female process is not clear.Cutting the roots may not justify the sex.single tap root in other videos shows the difference.Female has a lateral side root plus the tap.I have experiment it and they are right so far.
Thank you for the info in planting papaya...new sub from the philippines
So nice of you
Over wintering in pots when it gets really cold. Do you bring them into a unheated garage to keep from freezing
Ok n this case, you must do that
How to grow these in pots? And what size pot would you suggest for growing? Also can these be pruned to keep their height a lil in control?
Really helpful .we will try this technique and I hope this gives good results. Thank you so much for such informative information
Most welcome 😊
Thanks for sharing the knowledge bro👍
It is my pleasure,
jack souke
How can you guaranted this plant will be female?
Can't wait to try growing it from the seeds!😁💕
😁😁
@@asrabali4394 😊
Thank you for your video. I just purchased 2 trees about 14 inches high. I'll Check them tomorrow and give them the snip. They are my first two, so do you think i should leave one as male if i have one? This is very encouraging. Thank you so much. And also thanking everybody for their knowledge also.
Where to place papaya plant for roof gardening ....high or less sunlight area ? ...Is direct sunlight necessary for it
High sunlight
Thank you so much.Can we get as many fruits if planted in pots as you have shown on ground.? What nutrients does the plant needs.
Am learning it for the first time I didn't know how it is done. Thanks alot
my pleasure
Hello new subs here from PHILIPPINES thanks.
The papaya has a main, tap root that grows deep into the ground. It keeps the tree strong to resist winds. It has 4 lateral roots that keep the trunk growing straight and stable. Eventually it grows fibrous roots necessary for water and nutrient uptake. If the tap root is cut or damaged, its role in anchoring the plant is taken over by one or two of the lateral roots resulting in a bent trunk, the bend appearing opposite the direction of the lateral root that took over. True, the papaya will produce roots to replace the lost ones but fibrous roots cannot support the tree especially if heavily laden with fruits. Strong winds will easily topple it down.
Thanks for the info. God bless you.
So this video is wrong? We shldnt cut main roots?
When you cut the tap root, the plant grow shorter and have thicker trunk, hence don't have to worry about strong wind.
Strong wind will topple tall papaya tree not the shorter one...
One note : Commercial farmer don't do it, hermaphrodite seeds is used instead and the female plant are discarded.
@@JohnSmith-nz2yq that's right! Don't cut the tap root. The plant will grow tall and strong. Cutting the tap root does not make it grow a bigger trunk, and fibrous roots aren't strong enough to keep the tree upright in strong winds.
@@darrenleong7953 who told you that?
Very very nice and learnable video, definitely I must try.Thank you.
My pleasure to hear that 😊
Now i know thanks for the demo how to do it! Its worth a knowledge and I will start my own!
I'm glad u like it 😊😘
How did u know that's a female?
Very good brother, thank you for the knowledge you shared
it is my pleasure
Cleopatra Deleon
Ko
Ko
Thank you for giving me the idea how to choose the female papaya. God Bless .
Why do you snip the main roots? I didn't snip mine when I transplanted it. It's doing fine and fruiting/flowering now. Thank you for your video, very good demonstrations.
To make sure that the plant will be female . I'm glad u like it 😊
The male plant usually has one long root. If you cut it, many little roots will grow. Thus making the plant female.
@@qwenethnguyen3252 Oh, ok. Thank you so much! Do you have any suggestions on protecting the flowers on the plant? Something is eating my flowers before they bloom and even after blooming! I have no idea what is eating them off.
@@SokhaChetra sex is determined at pollination, no cultural practice can change that.
@@angelafranklin9866 spray it from mites