apet apple gas tynva nuwara asgiriye vedio akk danna annko
@pushpakanthi9223 жыл бұрын
Mama denata ayrudu 10 wage udade midule Apple eta dala peleyayak heduna adi 5 wage usata Awa. Oyawagemai gaha. Atharen puthara katu Awa. Passe mewage gas dekala thimune nene. Den aparade kiyala hithenawa dekkama. Baththaramulle. Ahanna danna kenek hitiyeth ne. Mata denaganna oni thenin thena katawak enawada gahe kiyala.gaha kapala demma ne
My biggest concern has been that how to trick the plants/trees to bypass the requirement of having the sufficient number/amount of chilling hours in order to get them to bear fruits under these more tropical conditions. Is there any alternative/workaround for that (obviously it may not be practically/economically feasible to have the trees in the containers kept inside the temperature-controlled green houses given the space requirements arisen due to the size of the apple plants/trees being relatively much bigger) ?. Unlike the various varieties of apple ber (despite its somewhat similar name, taste and appearance, it's not related to apples) which can be successfully cultivated and harvested under these tropical conditions, any variety of apples do require at least some number/amount of chilling hours (the no. of hours with the temperature below 45 F / 7 degrees of Celsius) for them to break the dormancy and bear the fruits. As per my understanding, you may be able to get the apple plants/trees to grow at the shady/cooler locations even in the areas like Gampaha, true, still wouldn't be able to have any harvest/yield/fruits. You may get the trees to bear some fruits in the hill country areas like Nuwaraeliya, Badulla, etc., true, still it wouldn't reach any production grade quality as per my understanding (the smaller-sized fruits with a certain sour taste in them). This restriction applies to pears, grapes, peaches, etc. too, may be to a lesser extent though. Have anyone of you seen any such satisfactorily fruit-bearing apple tree in Sri Lanka, at least a single such tree ?. I doubt whether there's any chemical treatment at least which may help/mimic in overcoming this restriction breaking the dormancy under these more tropical conditions (may warrant a whole new great investigation on this matter requiring some extensive knowledge on the subject !...) so that you may be able to get the trees to bear fruits of good decent production-grade quality .... This is surely an interesting subject, may certainly warrant some significant research too given the challenges associated ....
@CeylonAdvisor3 жыл бұрын
There are answers to all ur questions in the video. And yes this tree had good fruits and the location is Rideegama (hot climate). Please go through the video