On Sunday 21 June 2020 the Food Garden Group's second online food garden chat took place. We talked about frost, passion fruit, globe artichokes, avocados, broccoli, garlic, neighbours, timing of sowing and planting, and the influence of temperature. See below for a summary of the discussions.
Showing posts with label Passion Fruit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Passion Fruit. Show all posts
Monday, June 22, 2020
Wednesday, October 10, 2012
An amazing Nellie Kelly
In March of this year our group visited Mark & Judy's food garden at Lindisfarne. Everyone who came that day will remember the spectacular Passion Fruit that was all over Mark's workshop. At the time I wondered whether this was perhaps the largest Passion Fruit in Tasmania, if not Australia. This is how it looked:
Last week I contacted Mark & Judy and suggested we do a blog post regarding this amazing plant and that is when I heard the bad news. I asked Mark & Judy:
What happened?
Judy thinks it died of shock when Mark used it to break his fall off his workshop roof (Mark is fine, now), but Mark is certain they only have a life of about 7 years and as this one had been in the ground for around 10 years, so it just died a natural death.
Does this mean that Passion Fruit always have a limited life span?
Yes, this is the third one we have planted in that spot in 30 years.
What made this plant so successful, in other words, what is your secret?
It is in the right spot, a north-facing wall, sheltered, with lots of sun. Regular feeding with weak worm tea, lots of water in summer, and a few banana peels also help.
What variety was this and do other varieties live longer?
It was a grafted black passion fruit, a Nellie Kelly (see photo). They are the best. Banana Passion Fruit is another type, but they almost become a weed if not kept under control, and the fruit is not as juicy as a black Passion Fruit.
Did it produce more fruit as it grew bigger or was it just leaf and little fruit in the end?
It cropped every year, loads and loads of fruit, without fail.
The wall of your shed must look empty now. Will you put another one in the same spot?
The wall has been painted! It looks incredibly bare, but a new Nellie was planted on Sunday.
Any recommendations for people who want to give Passion Fruit a try?
Put it in a sheltered northerly position. Old timers suggest a dead possum in the hole before you plant a Passion Fruit works best. Being short on dead possums we just popped in some blood & bone, compost and potash.
Thank you, Mark & Judy, for this inspiring story!
Last week I contacted Mark & Judy and suggested we do a blog post regarding this amazing plant and that is when I heard the bad news. I asked Mark & Judy:
What happened?
Judy thinks it died of shock when Mark used it to break his fall off his workshop roof (Mark is fine, now), but Mark is certain they only have a life of about 7 years and as this one had been in the ground for around 10 years, so it just died a natural death.
Does this mean that Passion Fruit always have a limited life span?
Yes, this is the third one we have planted in that spot in 30 years.
What made this plant so successful, in other words, what is your secret?
It is in the right spot, a north-facing wall, sheltered, with lots of sun. Regular feeding with weak worm tea, lots of water in summer, and a few banana peels also help.
What variety was this and do other varieties live longer?
It was a grafted black passion fruit, a Nellie Kelly (see photo). They are the best. Banana Passion Fruit is another type, but they almost become a weed if not kept under control, and the fruit is not as juicy as a black Passion Fruit.
Did it produce more fruit as it grew bigger or was it just leaf and little fruit in the end?
It cropped every year, loads and loads of fruit, without fail.
The wall of your shed must look empty now. Will you put another one in the same spot?
The wall has been painted! It looks incredibly bare, but a new Nellie was planted on Sunday.
Any recommendations for people who want to give Passion Fruit a try?
Put it in a sheltered northerly position. Old timers suggest a dead possum in the hole before you plant a Passion Fruit works best. Being short on dead possums we just popped in some blood & bone, compost and potash.
Thank you, Mark & Judy, for this inspiring story!
Labels:
Banana Passion Fruit,
Nellie Kelly,
Passion Fruit
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)