Winn Sawyer wrote:
Is yours indoors? Indoor trees may flower almost any time of year.
The minerals commonly...... Therefore, in conclusion, no benefit is gained by boiling your irrigation water - in fact it could be harmful.
Yikes! What was that exactly..
In the short-term flower-removal is best, as the plant already looks very stressed, as evidenced by the brown leaves and small size. Bearing fruit would be an additional stress and I'm uncertain if it would survive. If I were you, after flower removal, repot it into a nice large pot so the roots can develop more (they hate root restriction). Plant it into a commercial potting compost, ideally one that includes loam. To lighten the mix, you could add some vermiculite...
When the scion is more developed, you taking cuttings from it and try and root them, though I'm sure you've already thought of that.
Mike Guye wrote:
Priyanshu Uniyal wrote:The Scion grafted is from a mature tree. Here are the photos.
Was the scion material delivered to you by post or courier, or was this taken directly from a mature fruiting tree, growing near you outdoors in France?
If it was delivered to you, do you know how long it took between posting & arrival?
The reason for asking is that I'm curious to know if scion material is capable of surviving the delivery route.
In this respect, be aware of this fraud, so that you or anyone else doesn't get scammed by unscrupulous ebay sellers - especially these two:
(1) the New-York based ebay-seller, dausername1: ....
(2) London (UK) based ebay-seller, [u][i]or
It makes me very angry and sad at the same time, when people purposefully take advantage of others with their dishonesty.
Inge Leonora-den Ouden wrote:Congratulations Priyanshu! You have flowers coming! Please send us photos to show what happens next.