Seed treatment: Prior to planting, make a weak solution of fungide/water ( any brand of gardening fungide will do ) and soak seeds in it for 5 minutes.
For small scale use:
Start seeds in trays using good grade potting soil.
Treat soil with fungicide before planting. Transplant seedlings in late
afternoon to avoid shock.
Nursery Practice:
Prepare nursery beds of 15 ft. x 3 ft. Apply and work
in a lot of well decomposed cow manure 20 days before sowing. Make ½" deep
furrows at distance of 1½" apart. Sow seeds giving a spacing of ½". Fill the
furrows with1:1 mixture of dry crumbled leaves and soil. Cover the beds with
black polythene sheet or straw. Spray water regularly to maintain the top bed
moisture, remove top cover; and lightly irrigate to maintain constant moisture.
One or two times spray with mild fungicide solution. When the seedligs grow to a
height of 2", transplant them to a separate bed at a distance of 6"x6" or
transfer into small perforated polythene bags filled with 1:1 seived soil and
cow dung ensuring that the plant depth does not exceed 1½". When the plant
attains 4-6" height, it will be ready to transfer into actual field.
Caution: Transplanting into polythene should be done under shady
conditions and be kept for at least two days under shade.
Papaya is native to Central America and is grown in tropical and warmer subtropical areas worldwide. It is a large herbaceous plant, usually with a single, straight trunk which can reach to 30 feet. The leaves are large (up to 3 feet in diameter) and deeply lobed, borne on hollow petioles 2 feet or more in length. The older leaves abscise as new leaves emerge, producing a palm-like form to the plant. The flowers and fruit arise from buds on the trunk at the base of the leaves.
Because of its tropical appearance and abundant fruit, papaya is in considerable demand for use in protected landscape settings throughout coastal and southern Texas.
Papayas are adapted to practically any well drained soil. The plant is
shallow rooted and will not tolerate excessive wetness or standing water. Raised
beds can partly overcome drainage problems.
Although papayas thrive best in full sun, some concession can be made to
protection from wind or cold weather. Close to the south or southeast side of
the house is the warmest location in most residential sites. Some wind
protection provided by other plantings or structures is helpful.
Varieties
Papayas are generally grown from seed so there are few true varieties. The
Hawaiian Solo, Blue Solo and more recent types are fairly uniform and are
closest to varietal status. Consequently, most papayas are types rather than
varieties, so fruiting characteristics are better considered in groups.
Papaya is polygamous, with three primary sex types: female, male and
bisexual. There are some cases where plants produce more than one kind of flower
at the same time. Bisexuals are usually preferred for home plantings, but most
types available in Texas are male or female. Because sex determination prior to
flowering is practically impossible, two to four seedling plants are grown
together until flowering to assure females for fruit production and males for
pollination.
Fruit types range from small to medium round and medium to large oblong.
Flesh color is mostly yellow, although there are some orange to red types.
Female flowers are borne along the trunk and can be identified by that
location and the presence of a miniature papaya fruit inside the base of the
flower petals. Male flowers are borne in long sprays that originate along the
trunk. Each spray is much-branched with inch-long, trumpet-shaped, male flowers.
Bisexual types are practically identical to the females, but have male stamens
surrounding the miniature fruit inside the flower petals.
Propagation and Planting Germination is accomplished
in approximately two weeks under full sunlight. The plants can be set out as
soon as they are large enough (about 1 foot tall) to survive with minimal care.
The pots of plants should be spaced 8 to 10 feet apart. Papaya seedlings should
begin flowering in five to six months, at which time they can be thinned to a
single female or bisexual plant at each site. In the absence of bisexual plants,
one male plant is needed for every eight to ten females.
Cuttings may be rooted to preserve a particularly desirable selection.
However, branching must be induced by girdling or decapitation in order to
provide the suckers for rooting.
Seed can be obtained from papaya fruit purchased at the local supermarket. If
the fruit is from Hawaii, the chances are good that the resulting seedlings will
be mostly bisexual. For nursery production of papaya seedlings with a high
percentage of female or bisexual flowers, controlled pollination between
desirable parents is essential.
Pollination
Pollination is accomplished by covering an unopened flower (female or
bisexual) with a small paper bag until it opens, then transferring pollen from a
bisexual (or male) flower onto the protected stigma, and re-covering the
pollinated flower for several days. The resultant fruit should be marked so that
its seed can be collected at maturity.
In colder areas where overwinter survival is questionable, seedlings can be
developed in late fall and carried through the winter in greenhouses. After
frost danger passes in spring, these seedlings can be planted outdoors to
provide fruit until the next killing frost.
Culture
Weed and grass control within 3 to 4 feet of the papaya is essential for
optimum growth and fruiting. Cultivation for weed control should be quite
shallow, as the papaya's roots are concentrated near the soil surface. The use
of organic mulches is highly recommended. Fertilizer at the rate of one-quarter
pound of ammonium sulfate (21-0-0) per plant should be applied monthly after
planting, increasing to one half pound six months after establishment.
Irrigation should be applied to thoroughly wet the soil periodically as
needed through the year. Avoid standing water following irrigation. A
fluctuating irrigation regime may retard growth and cause poor fruit set.
Because papayas rapidly reach 10 to 15 feet or more, cold protection of the
top is difficult. Protection of the lower portion of the trunk may permit the
plant to regrow from sprouts in the event of freeze damage.
Well-tended papayas should produce fruit within a year of planting, with
mature plants capable of producing 100 to 200 pounds of papayas per year. Fruit
can be ripened off the plant after appearance of a yellow tinge at the apical
end, but the fruit attains best quality if harvest is delayed until the fruit is
completely yellow.
The most common use of papaya is fresh in slices or chunks and in fruit
compotes. A thick juice can be prepared by blending diced papaya with a little
water. Papaya can also be sliced and dried. Green papaya is sometimes cooked and
eaten like squash. Papaya is a prime source of papain enzyme (meat tenderizer),
so green fruit chunks and leaves can be wrapped around meat or fowl before
cooking to enhance tenderness and flavor.
Root rots can cause rapid death of papaya plants. The only solution is to set
new plants in a better location with better drainage or use raised beds.
Watering must be done with care.
Virus diseases are quite common and uncontrollable. They normally cause
vein-clearing and yellow mottling of the leaves. Other symptoms include
distortion of leaf growth accompanied by stunting, poor set and the presence of
various greasy-appearing or yellow rings on leaves and fruit. Infected plants
should be removed and destroyed.
Anthracnose appears on the fruit as irregular, water-soaked spots that later
enlarge, darken and become sunken in the rind. Copper sprays have been of
limited effect in severe situations, but would not be expected to be of much use
under normal conditions in Texas.
Common whitefly is about the only insect pest which has affected papaya in
Texas, leading to sooty mold on the foliage and fruit. Sweetpotato whitefly also
is reported to favor papaya. The safest control is through spraying with a soapy
water solution.
Tip burn and marginal necrosis (browning) of the leaves is caused by saline
soil and water conditions common in much of Texas. Symptoms are usually more
severe on older leaves and during the summer.
The information given herein is for educational purposes only. Reference to
commercial products or trade names is made with the understanding that no
discrimination is intended and that no endorsement by the Cooperative Extension
Service is implied.
Educational programs conducted by the Texas Agricultural Extension Service
serve people of all ages regardless of socioeconomic level, race, color, sex,
religion, handicap or national origin.
http://aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu/extension/homefruit/papaya/papaya.html
For treating seeds of many types of trees, cacti, palms, grasses,
strelitzias, and many, many other varieties.
Cape Super Smoke Plus is an absorbent paper that is impregnated with
fynbos-smoke-saturated water. The paper is then dried and sealed in a polythene
packet. When dormant seeds require "smoking", a predetermined volume of water is
added to the paper in a suitable container and the seeds are "smoke-primed" by
soaking in the smoke-water solution for 24 hours. In order to have the maximum
effect in breaking seed dormancy, a range of natural germination stimulators has
been added to the smoke solution to overcome other forms of seed dormancy found
in many species. Each standard packet contains five papers, and 50ml water should be added to
each paper. Each packet is thus sufficient to make up 250ml solution ( approx.
8½ oz. ) and enough to treat approximately 500 large seeds.
CAPE "Super Smoke Plus" SEED PRIMER
Printable Order Form
The fruiting is 236 days from date of
planting and at a height of 30 cm from the ground level. The plant height is 273
cm. The fruit are small to medium size and oval in shape weighing 1-1.5
Kilogram. The fruit pulp thickness is 3.5 cm, and pulp color is orange to
scarlet red, and dissolved solids are 11.5 to 12.5 cm.
This species is wind
resistant. The yield per plant is 16 Kilograms
2321 Package of 100 seeds
$4.50 Sold Out..
2322 Package of 500 seeds $12.50Sold Out..
2323 Package of 1,000 seeds
$20.00Sold Out..
2324 Package of 5,000 seeds $75.00 Sold Out..
Taste:Sweet
Not
many seeds in the fruit.
Free of any papaya odour.
Plant Size :Medium
sized
Fruit yield:High
Starts giving fruit at short height
only.
2301 Package of 100 seeds $4.50 Sold Out..
2302 Package of 500 seeds
$12.50Sold Out..
2303 Package of 1,000 seeds $20.00 Sold Out..
2304 Package of 5,000 seeds
$75.00 Sold Out..
Plant size:Dwarf
Average height: 48 inches.
Yield:33
Kg/plant.
Fruiting starts after 235 days of sowing when plant attains height
of 18".
2306 Package of 100 seeds $4.50 Sold Out..
2307 Package of 1,000 seeds $20.00...Sold Out...
2308 Package of 5,000 seeds ...Sold Out...
$75.00
Average yield per plant is 80 Kg.
2309 Package of 100 seeds $4.50 Sold Out..
2310 Package of 500 seeds $12.50Sold Out..
2311 Package of 1,000 seeds $20.00 Sold Out..
2312 Package of 5,000 seeds $75.00 Sold Out..
Average yield per plant is 95 Kg.
2313 Package of 100 seeds $4.50 Sold Out..
2314 Package of 500 seeds $12.50Sold Out..
2315 Package of 1,000 seeds $20.00Sold Out..
2316 Package of 5,000 seeds $75.00 Sold Out..
Average yield per plant is
100 Kg
2317 Package of 100 seeds $4.50 Sold Out..
2318 Package of 500 seeds $12.50 Sold Out..
2319 Package of 1,000 seeds $20.00 Sold Out..
2320 Package of 5,000 seeds $75.00 Sold Out..