Thursday, December 26, 2013

New trees planted

Yesterday and Tuesday , planted out two rollinia from 1 gallon pots. (4h). Planted one in former "fern grotto" near site where we lost a mangosteen. Planted other in spot near mauka pond where we formerly cut a guava. Had to dig out the remaining guava roots first. Rollinia were from Garden Exchange and cost $10 each. 

Today, purchased two 3 gal ulu from Home Depot. ($32.95 each). A bit more expensive than Plant It Hawaii's tree sale would have been, but I was eager to get the last two in the ground, bringing total ulu to 12. The two new ones were labeled "Samoan Ulu" and branded "NG: Novelty Greens". Took about 3h to prep and plant the ulu. 

All four were planted with the weed block and hoop technique. This time, two perpendicular layers of weed fabric were layed down (with a slot cut halfway across each for the tree trunk). A hog wire hoop about 3-4' tall was secured atop the fabric using scrap wood stakes pounded into the ground, tied to the hoop with shoelaces or wire. A small amount of black cinder (0.75-2 cu ft) was poured atop the fabric, inside the hoop, under the tree's bottom most leaves, to hold down the fabric and provide more light block. Some perennial peanut stolons were planted in the cinder to assist with weed blocking eventually. 

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Tree sizes update




Breadfruit and marang are growing fast. Second smaller row of ulu needs fertilizer soon-- leaves are looking pale but they are growing. 


Rollinia has nearly doubled in size in the past six months. 



Driveway trees have developed nicely since July. 


















Sunday, December 15, 2013

Oil palm check


  •  Checked on oil palm in Back 40 property, in the most accessible section.  The palm has easily tripled in size from planting (since July). 
  • Tammy weeded around cacao and mangosteen in pasture (30m). Field cacao is looking very healthy, large green leaves with little rose beetle or other damage.  This cacao has a small barrier on the stem, which was some paper bundled with fiberglass tape. Perhaps this is keeping beetles at bay.  Mangosteen is still healthy, has added a few new leaves since planting but is not much larger.
  • Mowed several spots in the pasture that were long after most recent mowing by lawn service (4h). Some spots such as the former "fern grotto", jaboticaba area near shed, near mangosteen and cacao in field,  and the driveway trees were completely overgrown as lawn service did not touch them.
  • Jaboticaba trees were completely overgrown with grass and vines. Hand-weeded and whacked (1h).  Trees are roughly the same size.
  • "Spanish lime" lychee relative tree planted along road near shed has apparently not grown at all.  Still shows a few leaves but is stagnant.
  • Ohia tree on main lawn was completely dead. Pulled it out.  My guess is that there was not enough space dug out for the roots before planting, or perhaps inadequate soil prep. 
  • Banana trees near Mango tree show some small flowers but no fruit. It's not clear whether this variety of banana actually produces fruit. These were resident before we arrived.
  • Vanilla orchid on areca palms by bbq lanai looks very healthy and has climbed well up the areca palm. 


Check gulch cacao


- Harvested some limes from tahitian lime trees
- Large avocado tree continues to drop good-sized avocados, 3-4 per day. Some are animal-chewed either before they hit the ground or shortly after.
- Processed 3 gallons of avo into ziploc freezer bags with lemon juice.
- Cleared weeds around cacao in gulch (45m). Counted seven (7) seedlings, between 12 inches and 24 inches in height.  Trunk size still not big, maybe pencil-sized.