Paul, thanks for such encouraging fruitful tree videos. I’m 80, with a modest mango hobby: experimenting with just 1 hedge containing 9 mango trees planted just 3 feet apart in the row. Roots have space to grow outward into yard on either side of the hedge. I’ll try to keep canopy of hedge as low as possible, and train a couple of branches to grow outward on either side - hopefully leaving a kind of shady mango tunnel to walk under for maintenance and harvesting. I have 9 varieties and am currently grafting additional varieties onto the trees. It’s a hobby, and my goal is to create the smallest, most compact mango hedge that I can work while standing on the ground. My wife and I will be happy even if we just get a small amount of fruit per year (we can’t eat that much mango anyway, so we’ll just offer any excess to neighbors). A couple more years and we should see if this is going to work, or not…
Very aesthetically pleasing as well. Another factor that keeps average people from planting an abundance of fruit trees. Definitely will model my layout after this.
I was going to transplant a few of my mango trees this weekend because I felt they were too close at 14 feet away but I think I'm going to keep them in the holes they're in. Thanks for the video
Absolutely beautiful and brilliant Paul. Thank you. I’m inspired to do something similar. I’ve saved this video as a favorite. Please can you make a pruning video. Much appreciated. Also how do I get some rare exotic fruits into Jamaica. I’m hoping to retire their in 12 years time. So I need to get tree planted on the property over the next couple of years. Keep up the good work buddy.
Wow! Thank you so much for posting this video. Some of us would never have believed it if you hadn't posted proof. Now I can relax and not worry so much about spacing. Fantastic!
Very good informative video, thank you @Fruitful Trees, Paul, and the homeowner for sharing! Question: Metal pipe for mature trees too? Why "three" pipes for one of the trees? And, what are those pipes (metal); and where to buy? Thank you in Advance!
How tall do standard mango’s need to be to fruit well? The trees here look about 12 to 15 ft tall. I am getting older and I’m hesitant to climb ladders to prune trees. Dwarf’s like pickering would be easy, but how short could I keep the trees that are mentioned in this video?
I usually have just done normal tipping on all my trees but for 2022 I’m experimenting on my producing trees and I’m going to let them grow with no pruning or tipping but will continue to tip non producers
Richard Campbell is the expert that worked at Fairchild Tropical Gardens for many years. We bought a Graham tree at his advice many years ago. I don't hear too much about that variety. Lots of new varieties. Very good advice in your video. I think he has written books about plants.
Hi Paul, Thank you so much for an amazingly video on Ultra High Density Gardening. I watch your videos regularly and marvel at how people try to experiment on various styles of fruit gardening. I’m Buddy Paris and live in Sydney, Australia and I have a real small garden, but love to have a variety of tropical fruit trees. I have planted 4, 5, 6 and even 7 fruit trees in a 600x600mm square hole. I have 10 squares of such in two rows with a 1 metre between each square and one-and-a-half metre between the two rows. Of course my fruit garden is only two years old. I’d love you to visit one day via video. Thanks Paul, do keep up the good work. I always Subscribe to your Channels and give you a Thumbs up. Always, Buddy
Thanks for sharing this video blessings Can you clarify what the diameter is for each of the high density planted holes; for example what’s the size of the circle for the 5 trees and 9 trees etc. Gracias 🙏
Beautiful! What city do you live?.. I'm in Melbourne fl central and trying to plant those trees..how old are the 5 mango trees?... and the avocado trees?
Miami. The trees are all different ages from new to 38 years old with the average age of mangoes around 4 years. Avocados a little older average. If I knew which 5 mango trees you were asking about I could be specific.
Great tour! Really neat to see! It’d be interesting to ask what the root stocks are in these trees. I’m familiar enough with him to know that he likely started them all... so he’d likely know.
This property was impressive when I saw his original video but it is even more impressive after seeing your tour. He uses growing techniques which aren’t for everyone but very interesting to see how everything is growing
This is amazing! I would love to see a pruning video on these trees. It’s unimaginable that such big trees could be so close. With that many mango’s you could feed the neighborhood. This is very timely. Because I am planning in planting some mango trees. Is the cement circle like “curbing”. Just ontop of the soil?? Thanks for this vid and taking the time. It’s fascinating!
Yes the concrete circle are poured individually around each tree. First they scrape off the grass where they will lay the concrete then just pour on too. The fill a bucket on the machine with fresh mixed concrete the walk around in a circle as the border pours out shaped perfectly.
This year I only pruned trees that blocked too much sun from others. Only pruned the north side of those trees. This year that was the only prunings. But at the end of next season 2022 I will lower every single tree down to 9-12 feet and prune the insides where possible then shape them all around. That will give the trees a well deserved rest in 2023 and me too. Maybe I’ll be able to go away that summer to a cooler place for a nice vacation. I’ll still have plenty of fruit even with the severe pruning.
@@weiss613 thank you Weiss. This is also a timely answer. My neighbor, with the best mango tree I ever ate from. Just hired a trimmer & they heavily pruned it. They were afraid it was too much. Including topping it. I was thinking. Well, at least it was after it fruited. And, there is enough time for it to rebranch! I sure hope so! As I’ve sprouted 13 seeds from that tree. And I want grafts from it to clone it in a couple months.
@@nikolaipizarro4732 it’s popular down here in FL. It’s really just like a curb to contain the bed. Like concrete edging. It doesn’t go down into the ground.
I thought I went crazy and bought a bunch of plants and seeds but that's a lot of plants. The tree guilding is a very cool way to plant. I have a grafted Glenn mango I just got I want to try planting with an ice cream bean tree and 1 other fruit plant in the collection.
I believe in mango tree planted close to each other I lived in Trinidad and the mango tree uses to be close to each other and no one planted them mange fields may be one tree was planted and when the mangoes dropped the seeds bear tress and the trees bears mangoes and the mangoes when they harvest they bear hundreds and hundreds of mangoes and the trees are twenty and thirty years old and could be younger I love to see mango tree grow like that it reminds me of my childhood in Trinidad
Paul, thank you for bringing this guy. great intelligent approach, it isn't just next mango's garden. lot of useful info in this video. Specially for someone who is new here and doesn't know where to start from. Also a lot of questions as well. the question about the rings. How they help to establish anchor roots? And where to get them? How deep inside the soil the ring has to be. Also a question does Richard can share some grafting woods? I saw his amazing grafting technique video. Thanks both of you. For the video, info, also garden ideas.
The inside plastic rings are 2 edging pieces attached to make a circle. They are from Home Depot. They are easy to move down into the soil because they have a pointy rough edge. When you water the tree with a hose it only takes a few seconds and the water stays inside the circle and goes straight down deep to the roots. The ring has to go deep enough so water does not leak out below from the sides. The only fertilizer used is one that was made for hydroponics and it has everything in it needed for perfection. It’s called Foliage Pro 9-3-6. Detailed instructions are on the container. Your friend has shared a link to a Home Depot product they think you would be interested in seeing. www.homedepot.com/p/2-ft-W-x-0-25-in-L-Green-Plastic-Easy-Edging-51034/206449737
Thank you for detailed reply and the link. I planted trees some 2 years ago some 1 year ago. I see some roots go around trunk not deep how I want them. And is it not too late to place the rings now? Or ring has to be wider? Thks a lot
@@irenenabatov186 paul was only half right when he talked about roots on mango trees. Initial there is a tap root that grows downward seeking water but then lateral surface roots take off. If you fertilize the roots in the hole when young they will continue to absorb the liquid fertilizer for life and you won’t need to worry about the lateral roots. If you don’t coral the water and fertilizer around the trunk so the liquid goes deep down straight this technique will not work.
That’s amazing. I can only imagine when thise trees fruit and he doesn’t pick them all, they drop and the smell is horrendous😱😳😂 All in all an amazing video and a more amazing property. So tidy with all those massive fruit trees. Aloha!!🤙🏼🙏🏼
I go outside and scout every tree at least 2 times every day and pick any drops up. They all go on the fences so the squirrels have plenty to eat and stay away from my trees.
@@simplysimple7628 it’s not tough. Since I’m retired I love to take advantage of constructive and creative things I can do to get exercise. Since I can’t dig holes or plant trees because all my space is already occupied I can’t wait to get up and do every physical thing I can do. Just hate the sweat! Want to live a long time and exercise is most important.
Paul you're killing it with all these videos! Next stop....Bill's place in Davie. Chris from TT did a video on his garden, but want to see an update. Appreciate all that you do for the mango community.
Very nice looking yard! BTW, it will have a lifespan though. I have mango trees I planted 25 years ago, trunks and roots have taken over. Advise to contain roots somehow, if his concrete circles go down 3 or 4 feet.. that would help. Otherwise may have to completely clear out trees and bring in a stump grinder for the entire yard. Good news is he has about 25 years before roots start lifting sidewalks up. Cheers!
I have a grouping of 3 trees that are 18 years old and it hasn’t happened yet. Do not even see the roots on the surface yet. Driveways are perfect and the asphalt on the street are also not lifted up yet. Also have a big Haden mango tree planted in 1984 with no surface roots seen. That is 36 years
Love it ,love it , love it I would do the same , it's truly a God given gift n a blessing , you got my blessings man , you go good health, strength and long life 🙏🙏🙏
The person that growth 2 or 3 trees in one hole, that would be me. I jam as much tree as I could on top of each others. They are really happy that I did that. Like human, we like to be near and dear until covid came. Tree like to socialize too and cross mixing. lol. Thanks for sharing. I'm really feels, at home here, so I don't think I'm too nutty after all. PEACE
The sun moving around all day long so tree will be getting some degreed of light different times of the day. Keep planting people good for the world and fruit to eat and sharing.
I could get along well with this guy... I have so many trees and have planted some in the same whole and was wondering if I was wrong, but now I know Im a right
Yeah he can plant many trees as he want in on hole but they’re not going to produce as much as one tree stand alone. Would it make sense if the commercial growers already doing it if it’s works. This is like one big tree with fruits outside and nothing in the middle.
Maybe I missed it, but it would help to know where he's located? For example, close to the coast or further inland where there's higher disease causing humidity.
I’m so confused, the homeowner doesn’t like eating mangoes but allocates a lot of time and space to mangoes and avocados. Then he has a problem with neighbors taking the fruit that he doesn’t eat.
Only foliage pro 9-3-6. Just follow directions on the container. But you must put a small circle around the trunk so the liquid mix goes straight down into the earth and doesn’t flow away.
Lmao, he doesnt eat the fruit. He should open a fruit stand in front of his house. I was tempted last week to put my rosiegold and nam docmai in the same hole (which i know is not a problem ,so i just gave the 6steps of my size 12/13 feet. Lol thanks for the video. And as gardeners, we shouldnt be too worried about people or birds taking your fruit. That's why we do what we do, which is sharing and teaching. Truthfully u cant eat all that by myself.
Correction all the trees are not in one hole each tree had its own hole. But because they’re surrounded by a large circle of concrete it appears that they are in one hole in reality each tree has its own hole but they are close together and the concrete surrounding them all makes it just look like it’s in one hole. Where the trees are planted 6 inches down is either broken up or solid coral rock. Each hole was dug with a shovel and a pick and a lot of hard work or some holes were drilled with a big tractor and some holes we had to use a jackhammer. Lots of the best exercise.
@@weiss613 Yes, so i've read. I saw richard campbell actually cuts off his taproots and allows the surface, crown roots to dominate. I was just surprised they could do that well in such shallow soil, but it's exciting to know. Thanks!
Lovely but never-never plant mango trees close to your home they has destroyed the home foundation those trees can get huge as you know ever close to your home good luck
Let him send some for me mangoes so expensive were I lived in the Caribbean yes 4 for 3 usd or 4 for 3 usd it's true ok madness my Julie so long never bear 5 yrs an an avocado an coconuts I have to removed those coconuts trees😊😊
I am “the guy” The circles are for watering and liquid fertilization so that water and fertilizer goes straight down and not spread out superficially on the surface but penetrates down deep. Fertilizer is a hydroponic fertilizer. Look it up and see the ingredients and advantages. It’s Foliage Pro 9-3-6. It has all the needed micros too. It’s applied using a Chapin spray bottle that’s attached to the garden hose. There is an adjustable meter on top so you can set it on how many teaspoons or tablespoons per gallon you want to use. Much better than putting X amount in a 5 gallon bucket and filling up the bucket then lifting a 40 lb bucket up to pour. I can water 300 trees perfectly in 1 hour. Fertilizing takes about 2 hours or less but I don’t fertilize my fruiting trees from the end of the season till the fruit are about an inch and then only 1X a month for 3 months. My non fruiting trees are fed every month with Foliage Pros recommended dosage for 1X a month feedings.
Paul, thanks for such encouraging fruitful tree videos. I’m 80, with a modest mango hobby: experimenting with just 1 hedge containing 9 mango trees planted just 3 feet apart in the row. Roots have space to grow outward into yard on either side of the hedge. I’ll try to keep canopy of hedge as low as possible, and train a couple of branches to grow outward on either side - hopefully leaving a kind of shady mango tunnel to walk under for maintenance and harvesting. I have 9 varieties and am currently grafting additional varieties onto the trees. It’s a hobby, and my goal is to create the smallest, most compact mango hedge that I can work while standing on the ground. My wife and I will be happy even if we just get a small amount of fruit per year (we can’t eat that much mango anyway, so we’ll just offer any excess to neighbors). A couple more years and we should see if this is going to work, or not…
@rankpa, please adopt me. I'm in South Africa.
Great content Paul! Exactly what I needed to see! Surely, this will benefit the majority of your viewers who have average size land space for growing.
I'd definitely like to see more videos like these, focusing on maximizing yard space.
Amazing property.. gets more amazing every time I see it... Thank You for sharing Paul...
Very aesthetically pleasing as well. Another factor that keeps average people from planting an abundance of fruit trees. Definitely will model my layout after this.
I was going to transplant a few of my mango trees this weekend because I felt they were too close at 14 feet away but I think I'm going to keep them in the holes they're in. Thanks for the video
I planted mine at 9 feet and I think it is fine if you keep the trees small
Fantastic this is an eyeopener & inspiration to load up your small backyards
Thanks for sharing Paul, Great Blog 🙏👍👍👍
Where can I get the large rings around the tree. It looks so neat. Thank you
Another great video Paul, you've been putting out excellent content!
Absolutely beautiful and brilliant Paul. Thank you. I’m inspired to do something similar. I’ve saved this video as a favorite. Please can you make a pruning video. Much appreciated. Also how do I get some rare exotic fruits into Jamaica. I’m hoping to retire their in 12 years time. So I need to get tree planted on the property over the next couple of years. Keep up the good work buddy.
Been really enjoying your videos for a little while, thank you Paul!
This was a amazing video. Thanks two both of you. For sharing.
Wow! Thank you so much for posting this video. Some of us would never have believed it if you hadn't posted proof. Now I can relax and not worry so much about spacing. Fantastic!
Very good informative video, thank you @Fruitful Trees, Paul, and the homeowner for sharing!
Question: Metal pipe for mature trees too? Why "three" pipes for one of the trees? And, what are those pipes (metal); and where to buy? Thank you in Advance!
home depot and the more pipes the more secure it will be if it gets very windy
bro this place is magical lol ...imagine walking through these trees during the rainy season.
How tall do standard mango’s need to be to fruit well? The trees here look about 12 to 15 ft tall. I am getting older and I’m hesitant to climb ladders to prune trees. Dwarf’s like pickering would be easy, but how short could I keep the trees that are mentioned in this video?
they can fruit very short you'll just get more if it is taller
Beautiful fruit forest. Simply amazing. Would love to see how he prunes the trees after harvest. Side note: How about them 86' Mets. Stay blessed...
I usually have just done normal tipping on all my trees but for 2022 I’m experimenting on my producing trees and I’m going to let them grow with no pruning or tipping but will continue to tip non producers
Let's Go Met GO!
Hello sir Paul. Thank you very much.for showing the place mangos trees.it is very nice place trees mangos sir Paul. Thank you again.
Such a nice house with such a nice yard, both back and front! I loved it!
Richard Campbell is the expert that worked at Fairchild Tropical Gardens for many years.
We bought a Graham tree at his advice many years ago. I don't hear too much about that variety. Lots of new varieties. Very good advice in your video. I think he has written books about plants.
that 5 in one island, do you know or have an idea how big is the island? dimension roughly?
Hi Paul,
Thank you so much for an amazingly video on Ultra High Density Gardening.
I watch your videos regularly and marvel at how people try to experiment on various styles of fruit gardening.
I’m Buddy Paris and live in Sydney, Australia and I have a real small garden, but love to have a variety of tropical fruit trees. I have planted 4, 5, 6 and even 7 fruit trees in a 600x600mm square hole. I have 10 squares of such in two rows with a 1 metre between each square and one-and-a-half metre between the two rows. Of course my fruit garden is only two years old. I’d love you to visit one day via video.
Thanks Paul, do keep up the good work. I always Subscribe to your Channels and give you a Thumbs up.
Always,
Buddy
How deep do the concrete containers go down into the ground? Great inspiring video as I've got a bunch of sprouts from seeds firing off now 🙂
Wow how amazing. I'm motivated now!
Thanks for sharing this video blessings
Can you clarify what the diameter is for each of the high density planted holes; for example what’s the size of the circle for the 5 trees and 9 trees etc. Gracias 🙏
the trees were about 1 foot apart in some cases but I didn't take the exact size of the circle
@@FruitfulTrees thank you 🙏 blessings
Excellent videos , got some great ideas for my yard, .thanks.
Thank you for the useful info. you saved lots of my space. love from INDIA.
Beautiful! What city do you live?.. I'm in Melbourne fl central and trying to plant those trees..how old are the 5 mango trees?... and the avocado trees?
Miami. The trees are all different ages from new to 38 years old with the average age of mangoes around 4 years. Avocados a little older average. If I knew which 5 mango trees you were asking about I could be specific.
Great tour! Really neat to see!
It’d be interesting to ask what the root stocks are in these trees. I’m familiar enough with him to know that he likely started them all...
so he’d likely know.
He is answering many of the comments so he may see yours and reply.
What fertilizer did he use?
Amazing, I just did this out of necessity so it's so nice to see that it works!!
This property was impressive when I saw his original video but it is even more impressive after seeing your tour. He uses growing techniques which aren’t for everyone but very interesting to see how everything is growing
THAT'S TOTAL MADNESS!!!!!
Beautiful!!!
This is amazing! I would love to see a pruning video on these trees. It’s unimaginable that such big trees could be so close. With that many mango’s you could feed the neighborhood. This is very timely. Because I am planning in planting some mango trees. Is the cement circle like “curbing”. Just ontop of the soil?? Thanks for this vid and taking the time. It’s fascinating!
Yes the concrete circle are poured individually around each tree. First they scrape off the grass where they will lay the concrete then just pour on too. The fill a bucket on the machine with fresh mixed concrete the walk around in a circle as the border pours out shaped perfectly.
This year I only pruned trees that blocked too much sun from others. Only pruned the north side of those trees. This year that was the only prunings. But at the end of next season 2022 I will lower every single tree down to 9-12 feet and prune the insides where possible then shape them all around. That will give the trees a well deserved rest in 2023 and me too. Maybe I’ll be able to go away that summer to a cooler place for a nice vacation. I’ll still have plenty of fruit even with the severe pruning.
@@weiss613 thank you Weiss. This is also a timely answer. My neighbor, with the best mango tree I ever ate from. Just hired a trimmer & they heavily pruned it. They were afraid it was too much. Including topping it. I was thinking. Well, at least it was after it fruited. And, there is enough time for it to rebranch! I sure hope so! As I’ve sprouted 13 seeds from that tree. And I want grafts from it to clone it in a couple months.
I'm confused about the concrete, how deep does it go?
@@nikolaipizarro4732 it’s popular down here in FL. It’s really just like a curb to contain the bed. Like concrete edging. It doesn’t go down into the ground.
Hello my name is Caleb I'm very new at planting Mango seeds ,but I'm wondering why some of the seed have two stalks? Can you please tell me.
depending where you want them to split some will create 2 or 3 splits very low
I laugh so hard, when you said "He put not only 1,2,3 trees in one hold. B-U-T .5 trees in one hole!" I really feel at home with your video. Thanks
Do you fertilize while fruit is on the tree?
usually most people don't but I put my food scraps under there all the time
Can I do that with papaya (3 trees in one hole)?
What is the purpose of the 55 gal drum circle inside the bigger circle? Does it make the roots grow straight down instead of out?
I forgot the reason I'll ask him
May be to make it look more nice and neat?@@FruitfulTrees
I thought I went crazy and bought a bunch of plants and seeds but that's a lot of plants. The tree guilding is a very cool way to plant. I have a grafted Glenn mango I just got I want to try planting with an ice cream bean tree and 1 other fruit plant in the collection.
Really enjoy your tours also digging your intro music
I believe in mango tree planted close to each other I lived in Trinidad and the mango tree uses to be close to each other and no one planted them mange fields may be one tree was planted and when the mangoes dropped the seeds bear tress and the trees bears mangoes and the mangoes when they harvest they bear hundreds and hundreds of mangoes and the trees are twenty and thirty years old and could be younger I love to see mango tree grow like that it reminds me of my childhood in Trinidad
Hi Paul, love your videos. Would Like to visit you I live north of you in Port Saint Lucie what's the best way to contact you?
I'm a mango lover.
paul@Rawlife.com
How long does those gold small mango produce fruit from a pit?
Not sure but he is answering many of the comments so you may get a reply
Does Richard have a youtube channel? I'd love to follow his progress.
Paul, thank you for bringing this guy.
great intelligent approach, it isn't just next mango's garden. lot of useful info in this video. Specially for someone who is new here and doesn't know where to start from. Also a lot of questions as well. the question about the rings. How they help to establish anchor roots? And where to get them? How deep inside the soil the ring has to be. Also a question does Richard can share some grafting woods? I saw his amazing grafting technique video.
Thanks both of you. For the video, info, also garden ideas.
The inside plastic rings are 2 edging pieces attached to make a circle. They are from Home Depot. They are easy to move down into the soil because they have a pointy rough edge. When you water the tree with a hose it only takes a few seconds and the water stays inside the circle and goes straight down deep to the roots. The ring has to go deep enough so water does not leak out below from the sides. The only fertilizer used is one that was made for hydroponics and it has everything in it needed for perfection. It’s called Foliage Pro 9-3-6. Detailed instructions are on the container.
Your friend has shared a link to a Home Depot product they think you would be interested in seeing.
www.homedepot.com/p/2-ft-W-x-0-25-in-L-Green-Plastic-Easy-Edging-51034/206449737
Thank you for detailed reply and the link. I planted trees some 2 years ago some 1 year ago. I see some roots go around trunk not deep how I want them.
And is it not too late to place the rings now? Or ring has to be wider? Thks a lot
@@irenenabatov186 paul was only half right when he talked about roots on mango trees. Initial there is a tap root that grows downward seeking water but then lateral surface roots take off. If you fertilize the roots in the hole when young they will continue to absorb the liquid fertilizer for life and you won’t need to worry about the lateral roots. If you don’t coral the water and fertilizer around the trunk so the liquid goes deep down straight this technique will not work.
Hi, very nice.. Can you post a video about the planting of these plants from 0th level.
what do you mean by 0th level
@@FruitfulTrees sorry!! I mean from start (preparing ground, material used, plant distance in single hole) will be more interesting. Thanks
Very nice!
Where did he buy the concrete tree rings?
They were concrete poured around the tree by a guy in Miami who does decorative concrete
5 in one hole wow I have to try thT
Thanks for sharing this with us 🇺🇸
I might of missed it but how does he prune the trees the 5 in one hole?
So we’re not supposed to eat the fruit for the first 3 years? Such an amazing 🤩 property definitely goals 😍
That's the owners personal belief.
Loved it!
That’s amazing. I can only imagine when thise trees fruit and he doesn’t pick them all, they drop and the smell is horrendous😱😳😂 All in all an amazing video and a more amazing property. So tidy with all those massive fruit trees. Aloha!!🤙🏼🙏🏼
I go outside and scout every tree at least 2 times every day and pick any drops up. They all go on the fences so the squirrels have plenty to eat and stay away from my trees.
@@weiss613 very smart. Must be tough to keep up with all the fruits when thise trees give. That’s a great problem to have.😂👍🏼🤙🏼
@@simplysimple7628 it’s not tough. Since I’m retired I love to take advantage of constructive and creative things I can do to get exercise. Since I can’t dig holes or plant trees because all my space is already occupied I can’t wait to get up and do every physical thing I can do. Just hate the sweat! Want to live a long time and exercise is most important.
Heaven! Congratulations to him !
Awesome!
So what fertilizer you shouldn't put on Mangos?
Paul goofed when he said fertilizer caused the big problem. It was weed and grass killer that killed a lot more than weeds and grass.
My error, woops. sorry Richard.
How does he get rid of diseases and bugs, especially in the shade?
He often replies to the comments here
Thank you.
Can't wait to meet you, when I found out you were vegan my fan meter went into overdrive
vegan Power!
What county is he growing all these mango?
Miami area
Paul you're killing it with all these videos! Next stop....Bill's place in Davie. Chris from TT did a video on his garden, but want to see an update. Appreciate all that you do for the mango community.
Very nice looking yard! BTW, it will have a lifespan though. I have mango trees I planted 25 years ago, trunks and roots have taken over. Advise to contain roots somehow, if his concrete circles go down 3 or 4 feet.. that would help. Otherwise may have to completely clear out trees and bring in a stump grinder for the entire yard. Good news is he has about 25 years before roots start lifting sidewalks up. Cheers!
I have a grouping of 3 trees that are 18 years old and it hasn’t happened yet. Do not even see the roots on the surface yet. Driveways are perfect and the asphalt on the street are also not lifted up yet. Also have a big Haden mango tree planted in 1984 with no surface roots seen. That is 36 years
Love it ,love it , love it I would do the same , it's truly a God given gift n a blessing , you got my blessings man , you go good health, strength and long life 🙏🙏🙏
The person that growth 2 or 3 trees in one hole, that would be me. I jam as much tree as I could on top of each others. They are really happy that I did that. Like human, we like to be near and dear until covid came. Tree like to socialize too and cross mixing. lol. Thanks for sharing. I'm really feels, at home here, so I don't think I'm too nutty after all. PEACE
No friend these trees are not loaded with fruits they have just few fruits on these trees due to lack of sunlight..
The sun moving around all day long so tree will be getting some degreed of light different times of the day. Keep planting people good for the world and fruit to eat and sharing.
I wouldn't consider that five trees in one hole I would just consider that five trees planted close together
Where’s Richard, the mango trees guy? It’s so amazing!
I could get along well with this guy... I have so many trees and have planted some in the same whole and was wondering if I was wrong, but now I know Im a right
How many mango and avocado trees did he have in the property?
270 mango 30 avocado 2 lychee
Unreal yard
Awesome video
Does he have them plunged ?
what do you mean plunged?
Easy to start mango trees from seeds.
You are good listener. You remember everything the owner told you. He must be a Vietnamese man. Just guessing
Amazing 👏
So neat and organized. #Lifegoals
love it
Interesting theory of waiting 3 years. It amazing little grove and very shady
Yeah he can plant many trees as he want in on hole but they’re not going to produce as much as one tree stand alone. Would it make sense if the commercial growers already doing it if it’s works. This is like one big tree with fruits outside and nothing in the middle.
Ground being shaded must help retain water longer.
Maybe I missed it, but it would help to know where he's located? For example, close to the coast or further inland where there's higher disease causing humidity.
There's a lot one can do in Florida.. I wonder if the same can be done in Los Angeles.
California is different but there are many other cool things you can do out there.
Just make sure they get enough water.
Dope
❤
I’m so confused, the homeowner doesn’t like eating mangoes but allocates a lot of time and space to mangoes and avocados. Then he has a problem with neighbors taking the fruit that he doesn’t eat.
Try to grow durian , it’s super delicious.
Durian is the king of fruit in Asia
Durian doesn't grow in Florida
@@FruitfulTrees Jackfruit does. I just thought Durian was so gross that nobody wanted to grow it.
Could you please let us know the type of fertilizer he uses for his trees?
Only foliage pro 9-3-6. Just follow directions on the container. But you must put a small circle around the trunk so the liquid mix goes straight down into the earth and doesn’t flow away.
@@weiss613 how often do you water the trees? How do you water them?
@@weiss613 how much fertilizer do you give each time and how often do you apply it?
@@weiss613 thank you!!! Could you please let me know where do you get the ring for your trees? As well as your fertilizer please?
Is this Richard Campbell home?
no
Lmao, he doesnt eat the fruit. He should open a fruit stand in front of his house. I was tempted last week to put my rosiegold and nam docmai in the same hole (which i know is not a problem ,so i just gave the 6steps of my size 12/13 feet. Lol thanks for the video. And as gardeners, we shouldnt be too worried about people or birds taking your fruit. That's why we do what we do, which is sharing and teaching. Truthfully u cant eat all that by myself.
Correction all the trees are not in one hole each tree had its own hole. But because they’re surrounded by a large circle of concrete it appears that they are in one hole in reality each tree has its own hole but they are close together and the concrete surrounding them all makes it just look like it’s in one hole. Where the trees are planted 6 inches down is either broken up or solid coral rock. Each hole was dug with a shovel and a pick and a lot of hard work or some holes were drilled with a big tractor and some holes we had to use a jackhammer. Lots of the best exercise.
What is the address, I want see? Please write the address?
@@weiss613 Oh wow, only 6 inches of soil deep?
@@shit2fly after tap root grows downward the other roots grow laterally through that thin layer of topsoil and it’s obviously thick enough.
@@weiss613 Yes, so i've read. I saw richard campbell actually cuts off his taproots and allows the surface, crown roots to dominate. I was just surprised they could do that well in such shallow soil, but it's exciting to know. Thanks!
Lovely but never-never plant mango trees close to your home they has destroyed the home foundation those trees can get huge as you know ever close to your home good luck
Skip to 8:48
Let him send some for me mangoes so expensive were I lived in the Caribbean yes 4 for 3 usd or 4 for 3 usd it's true ok madness my Julie so long never bear 5 yrs an an avocado an coconuts I have to removed those coconuts trees😊😊
where the lychees?
He has one or two lychee trees
What fertilizer does he use?
I am “the guy”
The circles are for watering and liquid fertilization so that water and fertilizer goes straight down and not spread out superficially on the surface but penetrates down deep. Fertilizer is a hydroponic fertilizer. Look it up and see the ingredients and advantages. It’s
Foliage Pro 9-3-6. It has all the needed micros too. It’s applied using a Chapin spray bottle that’s attached to the garden hose. There is an adjustable meter on top so you can set it on how many teaspoons or tablespoons per gallon you want to use. Much better than putting X amount in a 5 gallon bucket and filling up the bucket then lifting a 40 lb bucket up to pour. I can water 300 trees perfectly in 1 hour. Fertilizing takes about 2 hours or less but I don’t fertilize my fruiting trees from the end of the season till the fruit are about an inch and then only 1X a month for 3 months. My non fruiting trees are fed every month with Foliage Pros recommended dosage for 1X a month feedings.
@@weiss613 thank I am going to try this
And what fertilizer do you use for established trees? Different one?
@@weiss613 mr Weiss, so you fertilize at the beginning of the season when fruit starts to set ? Or after harvest is when you begin?