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(almost) no lilikoi for me
#1
This time last year I had more lilikoi that you could shake a stick at. This year I have very little. I have two purple lilikoi near the house (Kaloli Point) and I don't know how much yellow growing on 5 acres (Beach Rd. between HPP and HS/HB).

The plants look healthy and they flower. But the flowers are dropping and producing very little fruit.

Has anyone else noticed this? Any speculation to the cause?
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#2
We had a ton of the yellow two months ago, slowing down now.
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#3
Although the carpenter bee is the most prolific lilikoi pollinator, based on pollination studies done in the `50s, on the windward side of Hawaii Island, the honey bee is the predominant pollinator of lilikoi... Many of the beekeepers on the east side have had issues with bee populations since the eruption, & the eruption displaced or destroyed many hives...
Although there is not a lot of studies on honeybees & high levels of consistent VOG, based on quick "who has had honey production this fall & who is way down" it does seem that those locations that had a lot of days of VOG are now having honey bee production & population issues...
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#4
Got lots of yellow lilikoi still now. I'm also getting a few eggshell variety. My conical type is yet to produce. The giant soft-shell variety none so far this year either.

edited to add Jamaican info.

The small fragrant soft-shell Jamaican type I noticed a decline in the harvest this year.
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#5
I have a hive on 15 th,there are many in the park and about 20 million bees on railroad. Maybe a hive down by u would help? I h!ve a couple spares if u are interested.
Aloha
Bee crazy
Dan


HPP

HPP
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#6
I see bees around, but can't really say if we have fewer.

dan d - More bees certainly can't hurt, but what I know about bee keeping is somewhere below zero. I would have not idea what to do.
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#7
I'm having the same problem, lots of flowers and very little fruit. I see plenty of bees around so I don't think that's the problem. Someone said that all the rain knocks off the flowers before they set fruit. Other ideas?
Certainty will be the death of us.
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#8
kalanna - I too was wondering if the wet winter had something to do with it.
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#9
I think the SOx gasses have affected our lilikoi badly.
No fruit, very little foliage.
It has never been in this poor of condition.
I'm hoping it will rebound next season.
It is an older root, probably about 15 years old.
5 years ago I had pruned it back severely.
It took a year for it to recover from that.
I think I'll prune it back again to slow it down, maybe help it for long term.
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Was a Democrat until gun control became a knee jerk, then a Republican until the crazies took over, back to being a nonpartisan again.
This time, I can no longer participate in the primary.
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#10
I had the same issue this year -- very few flowers and almost no fruit. Not so much SO2 where I live, so it must be the rain?
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