05-03-2017, 09:22 AM
quote:Roger-wilco. FWIW, here's how my farming in Puna has gone so far...
Originally posted by terracore
If you use the county mulch, and have success or failures with it, please post them here. I am new to using the mulch myself and the less wheels reinvented, the better.
Been experimenting/planting since we moved into our house in Hawaiian Shores two years ago. We have an acre of land, half lawn (over 4” cinder), quarter pahoehoe, quarter a’a and mud jungle.
THE MAINSTAYS: Pineapples, papayas, bananas, and avocados. Of note:
Most of our papayas are of the “Caribbean Red” variety, which I have not seen elsewhere on the island…their fruit is huge – the size of footballs. Have grown several from seed, and they produce fruit in about a year and a half. However, they also die suddenly and randomly, about a third in a given year. The solution: plant lots more. While growing from seeds in pots has been easy using potting soil (Black Gold), planting directly in the cinder-soil works only rarely – lots of sprouts that soon die.
Have planted five avocados from pits; all five are thriving and growing about 3 ft/year. Don’t bother with all the You-tube gibberish about avocado pit planting – that’s for non-jungle dwellers. Just stick’em in potting soil, pointy side down, top third not covered, and wait a few weeks. Our (normally) incessant rains will do the rest.
I have used NO fertilizer on any of the above; they don’t seem to need any (although our pineapples are smallish).
THE MARGINALS: Citrus (navel oranges, tangerines, honey-tangerines, lemon) are all doing OK, albeit with slow growth (about a foot per year) despite fertilizing… but the internet says that’s normal. Tomatoes have been a challenge; only Romas and UH varieties are viable, and raised beds are helpful, but they all turn black and die within a couple of months, despite fertilizing and anti-mold sprays. My “cherry” tomato bushes each produced one or two tiny tomatoes before dying. I get a few puny tomatoes, but it ain’t easy. I hear tale of tomatoes growing like wildfire in Puna, but not in my yard.
THE PROMISING: Breadfruit, longan, lychee, rambutan, sweet potatoes, asian winged beans are all good so far, but it’s too soon be sure.
THE DEAD AND DYING: figs, UH-bell peppers, corn, UH-corn, watermelon, locally-sourced watermelon, UH-watermelon…. these all committed suicide upon planting. Strawberry and blueberry hung in there a few months, but never fruited.