Showing posts with label miracle fruits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label miracle fruits. Show all posts

Saturday, September 10, 2016

Garden Update by Cory


We hiked to the new gardens Thursday this week.

We need rain, things are still green but even some established trees are wilted.

Gardeners in the floodplain are busy preparing gardens and planting peanuts.

The share cropper has part of our big garden freshly planted to rice.

Note the erosion control berms made of the old weeds.

I have expressed concern to him about topsoil erosion and the berms are the usual local practice although of limited effect on soil loss from our heavy downpours, about 150 inches of rain in a normal year.

It is good having someone working the garden for free to help keep livestock out but he isn't there all the time.

A neighbor reported that he tied up a big cow that was in the garden and said we should come more often.

Damage was minor with nibbles here and there and only one palm mowed off.

I sprayed most of the trees/palms on the underside of young leaves and at the base with deer/rabbit repellent, will see if it keeps livestock and rhino beetles from eating the trees.

Peach palms on campus are blooming again as harvest starts.

One tree that had a small bunch of small fruit last year has four good size bunches now and several flower buds.

 The fruit are much bigger than they look on the tree.

The flavor is good.



Fruit harvested on campus this week:
front - 3 banana varieties (Gros Michael, Ceylon/little Cory, and a FHIA hybrid), breadnut, hot bird peppers, miracle fruit and two barbados cherries/acerola, wild passionfruit.

2nd row - bilimbi (sour fruit) peach palm, sapodilla, breadfruit slice.

3rd row - starfruit/carambola,

4th row - Blanc' mango, atemoya, cacao, avocado, biriba, 'Baptiste' mango.


5th row - squash, black sapote, coconut.

Not included but also producing: guava, African oil palm, regular passionfruit. There would probably still be a few pineapple but the last few disappeared before full size.









Thursday, August 28, 2014

Compassion Competition.

Representing 13 Wesleyan schools with Compassion projects, they arrived on
 Tuesday and will return home on Saturday morning. 
As the top students in their projects this week they came to try to become the Champion of their age range by winning competitions in many subjects. 



 We shared bananas, star fruits, star fruit seeds and miracle fruits. 

 
Dr. Bob and Marcia celebrated their anniversary today by attending their second day of Creole lessons. 

 
We did prepare a special supper for them but unfortunately Eli continues to feel poorly with a fever and could not enjoy it much.   

 
Joy, next to Anna is your stand-in!

 



Sunday, August 19, 2012

Sharing Bountiful Bananas!

Roof is painted and the guest house roof started.

Birthday flowers.

Lots of bananas, star fruits and miracle fruits ripe this week.

For those of you unfamiliar with miracle fruits they are a bit of sweet pulp around a seed.

 After the pulp contacts your tongue it acts like a natural sweetener and flavor enhancer for about 30 minutes afterward making the star fruit and other fruits really taste good.

Miracle Fruit Tree
Yesterday Cory brought down bananas for over 200 children on campus for their Saturday Compassion Club meetings.

The leaders received star fruits and miracle fruits.

Today for Kid's Club about 150 children will receive both bananas and star fruit.

Eli pointed out yesterday how good it is to be able to count school days on one's fingers.

Yes, 10 to go [then a long weekend and we'll start the next 'year' for a couple weeks.

Anna pointed out this morning 35 days before we travel to the USA. So I guess we're into count down mode.

Next week my folks head out for a trip to South Africa with friends. So thankful that the Lord opened this door to bless them!

It will be strange not to have as much E-mail contact with them as we normally do..so extra E-mails and comments welcome.