Arizona Chickens

 
Dude are you kidding me!!! I have tried 3-4x to grow passion fruit.. You never cease to amaze us. I am going to just dream about having that here.. "Beam it over Scotty"

Coveting



Gallo, you have the best green thumb around! What do passion fruit taste like?


You know, the only time I ever ate them as fresh fruit was in 1990 in Costa Rica, so nearly 25 years ago.  I had them again in various dessert forms later in Ecuador.  But with that first experience of the flavor I resolved that I would grow them if I ever lived in a place they would grow.  It's a sweet/sour/tangy flavor with a strong aroma that I associate with tropical fruit.  You eat the insides which have seeds kind of like pomegranates, but with a harder and smaller seed surrounded by a gelatinous coating.  I think that the relative sweet/sour balance varies with the ripening stage and from what I've read also differs between varieties.  I really hope the reality of the flavor lives up to my memory of it.

@City farm
, I'll go out and start rooting some cuttings for you this morning.  They take a while to start so we have some time to figure out how to get them to you.


Okay, awesome!! The Friday potluck party might be a day of travel.. It is only a couple hours away, this will depend on holiday guests. We do our thanksgiving dinner the weekend before with all of our friends. Our camping trip/mtb @ fantacy island will have to wait till late spring.. I can't wait.. Thank you much!! Can someone post where the potluck will be?
 
I'm a 5th grade teacher in Avondale, AZ. I'm looking for about a dozen to a dozen and a half fertilized chicken eggs for an embryology unit with my 5th graders. Can anyone local help? I'm trying to avoid ordering them from EBay or craiglist.  I'm not picking about the breed... they will be given to a friend of mine that has a ranch in North Phoenix.  Thanks for the help!

cindy


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We don't have any at the moment..
 
Yeehaa! They better earn their keep.. :lau NA, we have chickens that don't lay, they will always be here with us... :woot

I'm glad I'm not the only one keeping a barren chicken around.  She's only ever laid 6 eggs in her life.  Cute bluish/green eggs.  She's the biggest chicken we have and laid the smallest strangest shaped eggs.  Didn't get to even eat them because they were pullet size and the shell was so thin.  Our RIR laid the jumbo eggs that kept the lid from closing on the carton.  She was our smallest and laid the biggest egg but she passed this summer.  Gotta love our girls. 


Our silkie Cheryl, she has been broody 4x this year. 1 time with another sister.. She will always stay with us. Cheryl & Clair are my DH favorite.. When friends come by Cheryl will hang around us the whole time. Our friends & or neighbors can't believe it.. She is who we use to promote families to start a flock.. 5 of our babies from this last summers broodies are just about ready to go to a new family.. One of our barnyard mix layed a beautiful tiny green egg Friday.. The girls we are giving them started laying this week.. The barnvelder I think just started laying. It is hard to tell who layed the egg.. They are so spoiled aren't they..
 
 
....if you don't mind sir, I hate it ask you to do anymore, but if its possible would you put one or two cuttings to start for me as well please, I live near City Farm so maybe I can meet up with her, or if I happen to come down to Tucson take them both up.thanks for letting me ask, lol. I used to love eating them when I was in Hawaii and I have been able to buy them at some of the Hispanic markets in Arizona and I love them. Oahu was a great place to live for tropical fruits back in the early 1990's for me. I've also been able to start papayas here by seed, but the frost kills them off and I started them from a dried Hawaiian sunrise papaya seeds! :love Next year I will start them inside and then bring him outside right after the frost clears. I tend to grow these on the east side of my house so that way they have shade from the afternoon full sun. I have a man called the, "organic Gardener, " near me and I think he has some different suggestions on growing papayas here. I'll have one extra of what I believe it's called a Caribbean guava started, that I had bought from either Home Depot or Lowe's; that has done really well for me here and I just planted it a little over year ago and it is fruiting its second time this year! It is quite tasty if you let it ripen up enough and get on the yellow side. I hear some people eat them green with salt. Keep in mind this guava is sensitive to the frost, so it would need to be covered with a sheet or have Christmas lights placed on it to help keep it warm during frost times. currently, I do not know if it will come back during the spring if it dies down from a hard frost. Last winter I did not have a hard frost here so my guava didn't seem to be affected too much. And with that being said my pear tree seemed to do well


Not a problem, I made about a dozen cuttings this morning.  That's great about experiencing the fruits in Hawaii!  I read that a lot of passion fruits are grown commercially there.   I think that with their short shelf life it's difficult to find them to buy fresh.  My Fuji apple has three apples this year!  Which is three more than it's ever produced.  :lol:    I'm not sure if we could grow a true guava here in Tucson with our colder winter temps.  My pineapple guava flowered like crazy this spring, but no fruit developed.  :(



Passion fruit for me too, please!  I can transport from Tucson when they are ready.  We travel back and forth a lot. When are they ripe?


My Moringa just died.  I grew it from seed directly in the ground and it was doing great.  It was about 2 feet tall but it looks like some kind of insect ate the stem and the whole thing died.  :-(
I guess I'll try again next spring.


Well guess what? @Sill gave us cutting from their moringa tree about 3 weeks ago. I stuck the straight into the soil of 4 different areas around the property, right into pots.. I pulled one up and
low & behold, there were roots. I could not believe it!! If 2-3 make it I will give you one in a pot..
Let us know when you are in Tempe & pop on over for tea in the garden.. :yiipchick
 
FIRST BLACK COPPER MARANS EGG THIS MORNING!

The TPPFC club had a small show this weekend, and I had made prior arrangements with @desertmarcy to meet me there with some Black Copper Marans pullets. She was running low on BCM pullets, so she included one hen that was already laying, so this morning, I got my first BCM egg! Thank you, Marcy!

400
 
 

Not a problem, I made about a dozen cuttings this morning.  That's great about experiencing the fruits in Hawaii!  I read that a lot of passion fruits are grown commercially there.   I think that with their short shelf life it's difficult to find them to buy fresh.  My Fuji apple has three apples this year!  Which is three more than it's ever produced.  :lol:    I'm not sure if we could grow a true guava here in Tucson with our colder winter temps.  My pineapple guava flowered like crazy this spring, but no fruit developed.  :(



Gallo, if you are making cuttings, I'd like a couple. Will trade you something--eggs? I have a friend who grows Brazilian guavas. He gets fruit but goes to extreme lengths to protect it in the winter. He also has it against a south wall and it is protected on the west side as well and he covers the whole thing in the winter. I have 2 trees from him but they are just in 5-gal pots and not doing that well. I have problems with grubs getting in and feeding on the roots. I have a pineapple guava but never get any fruit and very few flowers.


We put the outdoor lights all around the plants that would freeze. They heat up just enough to keep them alive. Along with covering the garden and plants.. We get the light from Target. The bulbs can be replaced by the night lights, 4 watt bulbs..
 
What's up with this weather?  Not that I'm complaining at all, but the forecasts on Weather Underground predicted 0% chance for rain all this week.  This rain is perfect for applying the beneficial nematodes I bought this week.  They apparently do best when applied on moist soil after a rain.   I never get lucky like that.  Grubs, your days are numbered!


That rain made it here last night, OUT OF NO WHERE!!
 
in Mesa and most of the East Valley I was told that we have to have stone fruit trees that work well in under a hundred or 90 hours of chill time.

So the Dorsett Apple seems to do well here for most of us in the Mesa and in the San Tan Valley, based on the people I have surveyed. I didn't realize Tucson was so much colder than us up North, but you're more of a desert down there I believe. Or so it seems. Thank you for the info of possibly a Phoenix CA Rate fruit growers group! :thumbsup

I think you're probably closer to 200 hours.  Here are some chill hour links.  

This one is to the raw data.  They have deactivated some stations lessening accuracy.
http://ag.arizona.edu/azmet/az-data.htm

This one tells you how to input the data to better read it.
http://www.phoenixpermaculture.org/forum/topics/winter-chill-data-for-phoenix

Thank you for the info to the links!
 
FIRST BLACK COPPER MARANS EGG THIS MORNING!

The TPPFC club had a small show this weekend, and I had made prior arrangements with @desertmarcy to meet me there with some Black Copper Marans pullets. She was running low on BCM pullets, so she included one hen that was already laying, so this morning, I got my first BCM egg! Thank you, Marcy!

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How eggciting!! Beautiful.
 
Papaya is definitely tropical and will freeze in the winter unless you have a heated greenhouse to put it in. A lot of these plant seeds are SO tempting to sprout but they will not be able to get big or old enough to fruit here in Tucson.
I was told if I keep it inside during the winter and outside during the summer it would grow and produce. I figure cannot hurt to plant it in a pot, if no fruit it should be a pretty tree. I am thinking of keeping it in my chicken room because their is higher humidity in there.

Oh, you haven't heard? It's the miracle tree that will save the world. Seriously though, it's a super fast growing tree with edible leaves and seeds that are high in protein. The leaves are a bit bitter for my tastes and apparently the tastes of my chickens. Hopefully the seeds will be better.
I have some seeds to plant, is now the best time and should I plant in ground or in a pot?


FIRST BLACK COPPER MARANS EGG THIS MORNING!

The TPPFC club had a small show this weekend, and I had made prior arrangements with @desertmarcy to meet me there with some Black Copper Marans pullets. She was running low on BCM pullets, so she included one hen that was already laying, so this morning, I got my first BCM egg! Thank you, Marcy!

wow beautiful color!!! so nice. congrats
 

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