enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: ever bearing mango tree florida

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of mango cultivars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mango_cultivars

    Choc Anan is known as the ever-bearing mango tree because of its potential to have a mango crop during the summer and winter. Some speculate that removing the summer crop may increase the chances of a winter crop by allowing the tree to save the energy that would have been used for fruit production in the summer. Cogshall: United States

  3. Edward (mango) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_(mango)

    During the early 20th century, Edward Simmonds was the head of the USDA's Plant Introduction Station in Miami, Florida.Due to the problems encountered with Indian-descended mango cultivars in Florida relating to their poor disease resistance and unreliable bearing habits, Simmonds began a mango breeding program in the 1920s where he sought to cross several cultivars of Indian descent with ...

  4. Earlygold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earlygold

    The original tree was grown on the grove of Frank Adams in Pine Island, Florida. [1] For decades the parentage of the tree was unknown but a pedigree analysis indicated that Haden was the likely parent. [2] Scions were sent to the Sub-Tropical Research Station near Miami, Florida, and a grafted tree was planted there in 1942. A distinctive ...

  5. Haden (mango) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haden_(mango)

    Photograph of what is believed to be the original 'Haden' tree, located in Coconut Grove, Florida. In 1902, Captain John J. Haden, a retired U.S. army officer living in Coconut Grove, Florida, planted four dozen [2] seedlings of Mulgoba mangoes he had purchased from Professor Elbridge Gale in Mangonia, near Lake Worth Lagoon in the area of present-day West Palm Beach.

  6. Florigon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florigon

    The tree was believed to be a seedling of the Saigon mango, however a 2005 pedigree analysis estimated that Haden was the likely parent, [3] but this is complicated by the fact that Florigon is a polyembryonic mango. The name Florigon was a combination of Florida and Saigon. [4] The tree first fruited in 1936.

  7. Goodbye, Mango Hill: Hatcher farm, home of special ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/goodbye-mango-hill-hatcher...

    A fruit stand and more than 100 mango trees greet them. “They seem to enjoy coming here,” Marilynn Hatcher said in 2010. “It reminds them of Old Florida, and I try to keep Old Florida alive ...

  1. Ads

    related to: ever bearing mango tree florida