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Old 05-04-2003, 06:36 AM
Dwayne
 
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Default re Cape Gooseberries

I dont know anything about Cape Gooseberries, but I have been able to get
apple and pear seeds to sprout and grow by putting them into a plastic bag
with a little moist dirt. Then I stick the bag and all into my refrigerator
in the bottom drawer normally used to store fruit and vegies. After 30
days, I take it out and look it over. If some have sprouted, I take them
out and put them into a pot of dirt, then return the rest to the "frig" for
anohter 30 days.

I havent tried it, but some have had luck with peaches and plums. I want to
try cherries and grapes someday, but always find excuses that I am too busy.

Good luck. Dwayne




"irvin savage" wrote in message
. ..
Hi John,
Cape Gooseberries are still around but perhaps a bit scarcer now than they
were. NZ had a go at commercially producing them and they were available

for
a while in specialist fruit shops (this is about ten years ago now). They
bear very little similarity to the European gooseberry.
The plants tend to grow in dry, neglected areas and were common in WA in

my
youth...they were essentially a "kids" fruit... like loquats although I

can
remember quite good jams being made from them. The fruit is sweet and

tart,
yellow/orange when ripe and about the size of a marble. The fruit is

encased
in a "lantern" which dries out to a straw colour after which it falls to

the
ground. A good producing plant might have anything up to 30 of these ripe
fruits lying in their dry lanterns on the ground under the plant. If the
plant grows in good soil, it will tend to put on a lot of vegetative

growth
and produce little fruit...perhaps like the ones you came across. I

managed
to pick up some ripe berries late last year from a friends place in

northern
NSW but have not had success in getting the plants to grow from seed yet.

I
have seen them growing in Qld and the NT as well as NSW and WA so they are
pretty wide spread but, as I said, do not seem to be as prolific now as

they
once were.
I don't recall ever seeing the plant for sale in a nursery.
Hope this helps (they are not some form of horticultural urban myth)

Irvin Savage