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View Full Version : Passiflora edulis for mild west coast temps??


Sean Megason
13-06-2004, 07:03 PM
Hi,
Does anyone have any suggestion of varieties of Passiflora edulis
(Passion Fruit) that do well on the west coast? I live in Santa
Monica, CA a few miles from the beach so the tempearute is very mild.
It never freezes and doesn't break 80 very much. I am currently
growing Passiflora edulis 'Frederick'. It makes tasty fruit but it
doesn't grow or flower except July-September. The rest of the year it
just sits there. I think Frederick must need more heat to grow well
(our tomato plants never grow either). I have a Passiflora incarnata
that grows vigourously, flowers, and fruits prolifically for the whole
year but the fruit are inedible. Is there a P. edulis that grows as
well as P. incarnata?
Sean

Strombus gigas
13-06-2004, 11:04 PM
Sean Megason wrote:
> Hi,
> Does anyone have any suggestion of varieties of Passiflora edulis
> (Passion Fruit) that do well on the west coast? I live in Santa
> Monica, CA a few miles from the beach so the tempearute is very mild.

Anyone who chooses to live in the Peoples Republic of Santa Monica is
****ed up in the head. Why don't you just go away, slash your wrists,
drink some hemlock or something useful like that?

Gardñ@Gardñ.info
17-06-2004, 11:02 AM
(Sean Megason) in
m:

> Hi,
> Does anyone have any suggestion of varieties of Passiflora edulis
> (Passion Fruit) that do well on the west coast? I live in Santa
> Monica, CA a few miles from the beach so the tempearute is very mild.
> It never freezes and doesn't break 80 very much. I am currently
> growing Passiflora edulis 'Frederick'. It makes tasty fruit but it
> doesn't grow or flower except July-September. The rest of the year it
> just sits there. I think Frederick must need more heat to grow well
> (our tomato plants never grow either). I have a Passiflora incarnata
> that grows vigourously, flowers, and fruits prolifically for the whole
> year but the fruit are inedible. Is there a P. edulis that grows as
> well as P. incarnata?
> Sean

might search for high elevatoin tropics passifloras

and check crfg.org


tomato
years ago i saw a tomato on coastal OC, near a SW facing stucco wall. i
wasn't sure if it was a seedling or if someone had actually planted it.
i saw it in october or later (rainy already) or similar cool weather.
unfortunately i was at a distance, so i couldn't tell if the plant had
ever flowered, but it looked ok.

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