Sunday, October 21, 2012
Ginkgo biloba seed preparation
It's pretty easy.
They've been in the baggies for a few days. I imagine that if I wanted to wait longer, I would need to refrigerate or keep them cool outside.
It's easy. The seeds mush out. Knife is optional. I did not wear gloves. For the sensitive, gloves are a good idea. Separate the seed from the pulp. Placed the seeds in a bowl of water. The pulp went into the compost. This was under a kitchen hood that vents outside. Working outside is a good option too. Otherwise loved ones will complain about the odor.
Rinsed under running water. Dried on paper towel. Once dry overnight, I'll keep in the fridge until planting.
Labels:
ginkgo,
tree planting,
tree propagation,
tree seeds,
trees
Saturday, October 20, 2012
Home Orchard Society
Went to the meeting today. It was a great experience. I felt like I was among kindred spirits. Lots of fruit to view and taste.Zillions of Apple varieties. All so much better than grocery apples.
These are the biggest. I don't need apples this big. They are fun to look at.
Grapes. Home grown grapes are fit for kings. People don't know what they are missing. Tasting many, I'm still convinced that grapes with seeds are superior to seedless grapes. Those tart tasteless things that pass for grapes in the grocery store should have a different name. They are not even close.
Chinese Haw / Shan zha. I didn't get a change to taste them. First time I've seen one. Second time might be on my own tree. Two years? Three?
Medlars/ I didn't get to taste these either. Another time. Later, other attendees told me they taste like spiced apple sauce.
Labels:
apple,
Chinese Haw,
grapes,
home orchard,
Home Orchard Society,
medlar,
pear,
Shan Zha
Charlie
My best buddy. Snoring. He twitches in his sleep, once in a while. Just being there, he makes the studies, and take-home work, go better.
More Gingko photos
This week collected ginkgo seeds. Surprised and oddly excited to discover that several of the trees I thought were male, are really female. Maybe the last time I looked they had not reached tree puberty yet. This changes my hypothesis about this long row of trees. More than half were female. So they must be seedling raised, not grafts. Good. There must be 10 female gingko trees in this treeway.
There's nothing about the tree's anatomy that tells us she's female. Only the presence of the seeds below the tree, gives it away.
Another female ginkgo tree in the same treeway.
Ginkgo branches, laden with seed. In my earlier days, I called these "fruit". The look like fruit, are fleshy like fruit, and contain an inner seed like fruit. But botanically, the derivation of the flesh is a different part of the seed bearing structure, so the fleshy part is the outer layer of the seed. Confusing.
Pleased the camera took some nice pics this time.
Ginkgo fruit scattered on the ground. Even with so many, I don't smell the butyric acid that bothers many people. Unless I pick them up, and smell my fingers. Then it's there.
There's nothing about the tree's anatomy that tells us she's female. Only the presence of the seeds below the tree, gives it away.
Another female ginkgo tree in the same treeway.
Ginkgo branches, laden with seed. In my earlier days, I called these "fruit". The look like fruit, are fleshy like fruit, and contain an inner seed like fruit. But botanically, the derivation of the flesh is a different part of the seed bearing structure, so the fleshy part is the outer layer of the seed. Confusing.
Ginkgo fruit scattered on the ground. Even with so many, I don't smell the butyric acid that bothers many people. Unless I pick them up, and smell my fingers. Then it's there.
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