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Coffee - Printable Version +- Punaweb Forum (http://punaweb.org/forum) +-- Forum: Punaweb Forums (http://punaweb.org/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Forum: Farming and Gardening in Puna (http://punaweb.org/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=13) +--- Thread: Coffee (/showthread.php?tid=4063) |
RE: Coffee - asly - 01-21-2010 So the yellow berries are a different type/variety of coffee, or it's something that has crossed? Why yellow? I've read there are many coffee trees to be found in the wilds, in and along gulches around the island. Enjoy the day! Ann Back to blogging at http://crazypineappledream.blogspot.com RE: Coffee - Hotzcatz - 01-31-2010 (Ooops! I answered something about four pages back so this is now out of context. I'd delete it but that doesn't seem to be an option.) If you need a grinder for the white roast coffee, drop by and you can use my grainmaker grinder. It works on corn, wheat, popcorn and other hard stuff, it should manage white roast coffee as well. Guess I could try it with green coffee, wouldn't that be about as hard? http://www.grainmaker.com/ You'd have to turn the handle yourself, though. Coffee trees are a shrubby small tree. I keep mine pruned pretty short so I can reach all the berries. They seem to do best with a windbreak and they like chicken fertilizer since the trees which the hens like to nap under are much greener than the rest. Kurt Wilson RE: Coffee - `Ihilani Coffee - 09-28-2012 quote: Aloha Ann~ New to Punatalk, but see there are no replies to your question. You may already know that these are likely yellow caturra (mutation of Bourbon) or yellow catuai (Mundo novo and Caturra hybrid) coffee trees. Larger beans on more compact trees with higher yields and more disease resistance (in the catuai at least). Candi, `Ihilani Coffee RE: Coffee - `Ihilani Coffee - 09-28-2012 quote: You may already know that these are likely yellow caturra (mutation of Bourbon) or yellow catuai (Mundo novo and Caturra hybrid) coffee trees. PS: Mundo Novo is a hybrid between Bourbon and Typica, crossed in the 1940s. Candi RE: Coffee - liskir - 10-06-2012 Little Bill, a friend is a coffee farmer so I get his excellent beans. Would like to get some green beans from him and try to roast myself. Would any popcorn popper work or specifically the brand you stated? "An idea whose time has come cannot be stopped" Dr. Ron Paul 2012 RE: Coffee - Seeb - 02-11-2013 is there somewhere to get coffee tree starts ( not sure the right word)- just want to try a few in lower hpp RE: Coffee - Carey - 02-12-2013 I have some seedlings (have no idea if that is the same as starts) email or reply below if interested We have a couple of trees in downtown Keaau...& seedlings happen... Coffee really likes cinder...so planting in a pile of cinder is the best, as long as they have a stable place for their roots to go down RE: Coffee - rainyjim - 02-12-2013 seedlings, because of the tap root are a good option over a plain ole cutting. IF you graft a cutting from a healthy fruiting tree onto the seedling. if you do not (do the above) your plant may take years to fruit, or may never fruit. Many nurseries sell trees taken from cuttings that have very little rooting established and do not grow as fast or healthy as a tree grown from the tap root. RE: Coffee - bananahead - 02-15-2013 I find my seedlings and dig em out, a good place I know of is at the bottom of Laupahoehoe Point where the creek come into ocean, I hike up the creek a few hundred yards and there is alot of seedlings there... I also have been discovering quite few young wild coffee plants all over my property, because there is an abandoned coffee farm across the road from me, the birds bring em over and poop 'em seeds I rarely buy plants PS in lower HPP you need to plant them under other trees or they will burn in sun IMO ****************************************************************** save our indigenous and endemic Hawaiian Plants... learn about them, grow them, and plant them on your property, ....instead of all that invasive non-native garbage I see in most yards... aloha RE: Coffee - liskir - 02-21-2013 Hamakua coffee fr. HawaiianLavaJava.com tastes naturally chocolatey for chocoholics. Yum! SECRET KNOWLEDGE - "NOT FOR US TO KNOW"? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=91qs9v-upWI |