Utmost respect for the dedication in planting as well as the way you educate the viewers. Thank you for your effort in sharing to us your wonderful work.
I've been growing Dragonfruit for a while now and can give a few pointers. 1. Dragonfruit are technically a cactus, but they are an epiphytic cactus from tropical areas with a pronounced dry and wet season. They are not from areas with constant low humidity. 2. In nature the seeds get dispersed by birds and germinate up in the branches of a tree. They grow very slowly at first using much of their energy to send roots down towards the ground. The green parts of the plant do not like to sit in moist soil. It will often cause rot. That's why I never plant them in the dirt directly anymore. Instead they prefer to send roots down to the soil. I've found the best way to start a cutting is to tie it directly to a support an inch or two above the soil and let them send the roots down. This results in far less problems with rot. 3. In my experience, they are not self pollinating. I had a single plant for years that was huge and bloomed a ton and almost never had any fruit come of it. Once my seedlings started blooming I had tons of fruit. You need two genetically distinct plants for good pollination. 4. To bloom/fruit well the plant needs to be fairly large. So if you're going to grow these in a pot and want a lot of fruit, keep in mind that you'll need to have space and a solid support structure that can accommodate a lot of long branches. A large plant can easily weigh more than a grown man.
Some variety of dragon fruit cactus are self pollinating. I've never had problems with rot planting the cuttings directly into the soil. Letting the cuttings dry for a week or more helps prevent rotting and helps roots grow faster.
I've got one, but only because the local grocery store had them growing inside of a cool Buddha pot. It's growing well and will need a new pot soon. I'm looking forward to being able to eat some of the fruits as they're both very tasty and rather expensive.
So awesome, we have a dragon fruit that has started to flower bud, so in the middle of your video when you said they flower full at night I jumped up and had a look and it's flowering it's 1100 at night here, I'm so excited for tomorrow. Only sorry that I couldn't record it's opening.
That would just be amazing to see them flower in real time. It's nice to see it in pictures or videos but I think the personal experience would be euphoric.😊
This man is very awesome ☺️ it works. Later I will get back with photos I just got out of hospital with covid and I am not going to not get my 🏡 up this year God has been here the whole time .
Great plant ! I live in France, in 2007 a friend of mine bring a dragon fruit from his Vietnam trip, i keep the seeds and planted it in a pot in a glasshouse, the plant got bigger and bigger and acclimate well at 5°C in winter inside the glasshouse, it rooted through the pot into the glasshouse soil, few years later it start producing many fruits, since i was forced to remove it from the glasshouse, so i cut the roots and keep the pot inside my dining room, it is now a 13 year hold plant who grow near the window and continue to grow slowly with thin branches because the lak of sunlight. It's amazing how long this plant can survive without water.
Thanks for sharing your experience. You have given me hope. A friend gave my husband 2 transplants. I looked up how to grow and found this video. I have learned to read the comments for more info. I am in Spotsylvania, Virginia, USA. I believe we have similar weather. I will seek out a small green house for the winters! And pray for patience!! : D
Wow, what an incredible video! 🌱🐉 Watching the entire journey of dragon fruit growth from seed to bountiful harvest was both mesmerizing and educational. Your dedication to sharing such detailed knowledge is truly commendable. As a home gardener, I can't thank you enough for providing such a valuable resource. Your step-by-step guide and insights are going to be a game-changer for all of us looking to cultivate our own dragon fruit. Hats off to your expertise and generosity in sharing it with the world. You've earned yourself a subscriber and a fan for life! 🌵🍇👏
I love dragon fruit. I live in southern Arizona and will try this out. I love growing my own food. There is an euphoric feeling that I get by going outside and cooking from my own garden. I can't wait until I have my own dragon fruit to pick for a nice dessert.
I live in southern AZ too. Have lots of small df plants. No fruits yet. I'm trying to figure out how to keep them safe from the occasional freeze when they get big. They do appreciate shade cloth and more water than typical cactus. Good luck.
@@everyone8043 ok. So can I plant them in the ground or keep them in pots. Cause I'm going to buy the plant from someone. And I'm thinking of making multiple plants from the same plant just like people do with aloe vera. I just need to know if I should keep them in side pots or backyard with 24 hour shade? Can someone help me.
That's a big time commit crop. As I watched your dedication and application of processes determined by the growth stage of each plant, it occurred to me that the first cultivators (South American, I think.) must have been just as committed and tied to their crops. We know now about their Terra Preta (Black Soil) and that the indigenous farmers didn't just wait for nature to produce their food, but used technology to create the conditions that actually enable food forests to exist. Then thinking of the commitment of ancient farmers, I can't imagine that they would have been at all interested in abandoning their crops to go off and fight as soldiers in expansionist wars. Maybe gardening cultivates peace every bit as much as prosperity and good health for all humanity and should be encouraged for everyone, especially urban dwellers. Anyway, thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience in growing Dragon Fruit. I can see it was a labor of love to nurture your plants through their entire life cycle. THAT is impressive. You earned lots of good karma merits just for that alone! By now, you must have earned enough merit to get to Brahmaloka!
@@bellosardo84 Wikipedia, Pineapple Precolonial cultivation The wild plant originates from the Paraná-Paraguay River drainages between southern Brazil and Paraguay.[2][18][19] Little is known about its domestication, but it spread as a crop throughout South America. Archaeological evidence of cultivation/use is found as far back as 1200 - 800 BC (3200-2800 BP) in Peru[20] and 200BC - AD700 (2200-1300 BP) in Mexico,[21] where it was cultivated by the Mayas and the Aztecs.[22] By the late 1400s, cropped pineapple was widely distributed and a stable component of the diet of Native Americans. The first European to encounter the pineapple was Columbus, in Guadeloupe on 4 November 1493.[23][24] The Portuguese took the fruit from Brazil and introduced it into India by 1550.[25] The 'Red Spanish [es]' cultivar was also introduced by the Spanish from Latin America to the Philippines, and it was grown for textile use from at least the 17th century.[26] Columbus brought the plant back to Spain and called it piña de Indes, meaning "pine of the Indians". The pineapple was documented in Peter Martyr's Decades of the New World (1516) and Antonio Pigafetta's Relazione del primo viaggio intorno al mondo (1524-1525), and the first known illustration was in Oviedo's Historia General de Las Indias (1535).[27]
Thank you so very much for this video! It turns out my mother was cutting out the fruit before it turned red, and she thought it was just a flower that had wilted lol! Best video ever! And they way you stand them up, ingenious!
I'm looking for the right video to propagate my Dragon fruit plant into new pots, through stem cutting.. finally i have found a very useful and good video, thanks a lot 🙏😊
I love this channel. Just started gardening (have a dwarf lemon tree) and even though I cannot grow dragon fruits in my region (climate here can get pretty cold ), I enjoy your videos. Keep up the awesome work.
Your videos are FANTASTIC, explain in such details, and love how organic everything you plant is! Loved to also learn about the natural pesticide from your tomato growing video! Thank you for sharing your amazing know-how!
Very well explained !!! And Beautifully presented you explained every thing with the best way Thanks for sharing such a informative video with us My favourite gardening channel forever !!!!! 😊
Thank you. This is my 2nd time watching your video. Before giving you a like, I've viewed at least 20 videos on the subject (I tend to go OCD on research...). Yours is the one I will use as reference. Not a single piece of information was superfluous. Please, never give us less. In fact, more information can only increase trust and loyalty to your channel (I think... or maybe it's just me). So, thank you for a great video. By the way, it's fruit bats that pollinate dragon fruits. I can only assume that moths and other nocturnal insects also contribute.
I have no idea how I got on this video but I was panicking but this took my mind off it. 100% I appreciate this video. Maybe I'll grow a dragon fruit plant 🌵
This is amazing i love this video!! Dragon fruit is getting real expensive so why not grow some 🤷🏻♀️i bought one just for the seeds to be able to plant it and grow more so thank you for this video!! I love how you didnt make us wait years for the end product and showed us everything step by step!!
Your videos are equally informative AND soothing. You’re like a garden whisperer, w/ the greenest of thumbs! Your skills are so magical to me. ✨ Thank you for sharing your knowledge in such an enjoyable and easily-understandable format.
First time I understand the process. My first batch failed maybe too much rain (Central Florida) and not enough sun. Turned black at bottom and rotted away. Have cuttings drying out now and will try again. Thanks
I love dragon fruit! We always buy organic ones when there was still a farmer's market. It's the sweetest variety we have ever tasted!!! It's heartbreaking that it had to be paused because of the pandemic. Now I don't know where to get organic dragon fruit!! Huhuhu...
Hallo Janelle - Travels Where do you live? We have lots of Dragon Fruits plants & it’s Organic,in my Home province mostly every Household have Dragon fruits plants in their garden or backyard,its easy to grow & bear fruits twice a year
Thank you for a clear and concise instructional video. Living in central Florida I was unaware until recently that dragon fruit were suited to grow here. Since pineapples grow like weeds here if you just stick the green tops in the ground I am hopeful that with some cuttings from a friends plant the dragon fruit will be the same. Best Luck!
No words to say but I really want to say your love towards plants and it is pure and Hard work and patience i hope you will do more number of videos and keep educating us towards gardening totally in an urban world
someone gave me two young dragon fruit plants in a small improvised pot. one of them had just a single segment and the other had 2. they have grown specially the older one. lately i've noticed A LOT of growth. now the younger has 3 segments and the oldest is growing into a full plant with 4 central segments and several more segments branching. this weekend i moved them each to their own pot and built a structure around them for support. made the exact mix of soul you suggest. the only thing is that the pots i found are somewhat smaller than the one you use, but i'm giving each individual plant its own pot so hopefully they will be ok. it was difficult to transplant them because the previous pot was too small for two plants and there were roots everywhere, i had to gently untangle them and loosen them. so far they seem to still be alive. so i'll take that as a good sign.
@@delaraalaaeldin8669 they are huge. one of them had a single flower. i manually pollinated it(dont trust the pollinators with the one shot i got).....but it didnt become a fruit. the other plant had 3 buds sometime later. two of them fell off...one because a flower and the night it opoened i was there manually pollinating it. this time it looked like it was gonna fruit, but it also fell off. then came a terrible heat wave that lasted months....and the plants started turning a bit yellowy.......but eventually the wave passed and the plants started recovering. they are having new growth. so i take that as a good sign....maybe by next season they will produce. i dont know what variety they are, so i dont know if the flowers are self-fertile. i dont even know if both are the same variety.
@@sabin97Actually the progress you said is fair enough to keep waiting and trying with it maybe it will grow multiple fruits by next season who knows, and man it BLOOMED! That's really awesome
@@sabin97 Thanks for replying with such details, so sweet of you♡ And may I ask where you live as I really wanna try planting it but I don't know if the weather is suitable. We don't have dragon fruits here in Egypt I bought an imported one yesterday and it was sooo expensive I saved the seeds and gonna try planting it later wish me luck!
good information! i'm saving this in my agriculture list. i have two young plants, will eventually need to transplant them. i dont trust my memory. thank you for sharing your knowledge
Also ty for ur hard work for these videos becase I’m also about to make a mini fruit garden so maybe this will be my next option. Good job👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Thank you for your patience and support us to grow May you continue this plants🌵🌵🌵 based product to grow which will make our world harmony without harming to animals.Love from Bhutan
This is so cool! It's too cold here in New England to keep this plant without a greenhouse, but thanks for sharing! Maybe one day I'll be able to keep one :)
I love that knife 🔪 cuts real smooth. I got a lot out of your video. I would love to see a from seed start from you. But I’m very happy with this video. 👍🏾👍🏾
Wow I'm so impressed with this video! thank you so much for teaching us the proper way! I live in Nevada so we get a lot of sun hoping to do it successfully!
You the best. I have just started growing dragonfruit. Now I gotta ask you. I love the space saving style you have grown it. Even i dont want a huge tall plant. I have also come across the style where dragonfruit plant grows an umbrella canopy. What do you recommend one should do?
@Beardie Land how are you making the trellis structure (what material) and what is the size of the pot. Will help me a lot if you will please share this information. Ty
Great teaching Sir! Learned a lot from you while I'm eating a red variety of it. I saw this when browsing for a tutorial video of planting it. Thank you very much. ♥️ T'was great! We have an awesome GOD and He amazes me while looking at your video and separating the seeds from the flesh of the one I'm eating right now. GOD bless you! 🙏💖 I'm gonna try to do your tips on these seeds later 🌱😊
Hi, After seeded plants grow can their stems be used to regrow, “will that regrown plant fruit after 1 year “??? I intend to grow commercially can you advise how to go about ?
I have enjoyed watching and learning from your dragon fruit videos. I also have planted dragon fruit cuttings few year ago but I didn't know that it can bear fruit within a year. Gladly this year it bear fruit, maybe unknowingly I have induced it because I made some trimmings, coz it already have lot's of stems. Now I know I can help it produce more =) thanks!
Defintely well explained! thank you for sharing what you do with passion and also some information. Keep posting good content. We liked the facts that you shared. It's time, it's adventure.
Utmost respect for the dedication in planting as well as the way you educate the viewers. Thank you for your effort in sharing to us your wonderful work.
I'm
Can we appreciate the Time And Effort this man put in his video 🔥👏👏
i7 hi j JH high
True.. Great effort 👏
Obviously
Yes I appreciate any garden. Big or small. It requires love, patience and time.
@@adinagangmei6010 p
I've been growing Dragonfruit for a while now and can give a few pointers.
1. Dragonfruit are technically a cactus, but they are an epiphytic cactus from tropical areas with a pronounced dry and wet season. They are not from areas with constant low humidity.
2. In nature the seeds get dispersed by birds and germinate up in the branches of a tree. They grow very slowly at first using much of their energy to send roots down towards the ground. The green parts of the plant do not like to sit in moist soil. It will often cause rot. That's why I never plant them in the dirt directly anymore. Instead they prefer to send roots down to the soil. I've found the best way to start a cutting is to tie it directly to a support an inch or two above the soil and let them send the roots down. This results in far less problems with rot.
3. In my experience, they are not self pollinating. I had a single plant for years that was huge and bloomed a ton and almost never had any fruit come of it. Once my seedlings started blooming I had tons of fruit. You need two genetically distinct plants for good pollination.
4. To bloom/fruit well the plant needs to be fairly large. So if you're going to grow these in a pot and want a lot of fruit, keep in mind that you'll need to have space and a solid support structure that can accommodate a lot of long branches. A large plant can easily weigh more than a grown man.
What is the temperature of the area pls reply
But in don`t starve everything was completely different))
@@amanullakhanalur1975 Tropical, day time temps between 25 and 30 degrees most of the year and nights can drop down to about 17 to 20 degrees Celsius.
How often do you water it and what fertilizer do you use?
Some variety of dragon fruit cactus are self pollinating. I've never had problems with rot planting the cuttings directly into the soil. Letting the cuttings dry for a week or more helps prevent rotting and helps roots grow faster.
I probably won't do this, but man you are very knowledgeable. I learned a lot!
I love you
I've got one, but only because the local grocery store had them growing inside of a cool Buddha pot. It's growing well and will need a new pot soon. I'm looking forward to being able to eat some of the fruits as they're both very tasty and rather expensive.
วชวชนจ
@@karansingh-wr7ik (ಠಿ‸ʖಠ)?
Has its channel in Spanish
So awesome, we have a dragon fruit that has started to flower bud, so in the middle of your video when you said they flower full at night I jumped up and had a look and it's flowering it's 1100 at night here, I'm so excited for tomorrow. Only sorry that I couldn't record it's opening.
That would just be amazing to see them flower in real time. It's nice to see it in pictures or videos but I think the personal experience would be euphoric.😊
This man is very awesome ☺️ it works. Later I will get back with photos I just got out of hospital with covid and I am not going to not get my 🏡 up this year God has been here the whole time .
Wah congrats
This is THE BEST dragonfruit propagation video I have seen. Well edited and presented too.
Great plant ! I live in France, in 2007 a friend of mine bring a dragon fruit from his Vietnam trip, i keep the seeds and planted it in a pot in a glasshouse, the plant got bigger and bigger and acclimate well at 5°C in winter inside the glasshouse, it rooted through the pot into the glasshouse soil, few years later it start producing many fruits, since i was forced to remove it from the glasshouse, so i cut the roots and keep the pot inside my dining room, it is now a 13 year hold plant who grow near the window and continue to grow slowly with thin branches because the lak of sunlight. It's amazing how long this plant can survive without water.
Ya it's an incredible plant ...a beginner's bliss ...one should start fruit gardening with this plant to get the happy vibes n early confidence
It can last without water because it's a type of cactus. Pitahayas are originally from Mexico.
Does it still give fruit?
Nice 😊
Thanks for sharing your experience. You have given me hope. A friend gave my husband 2 transplants. I looked up how to grow and found this video. I have learned to read the comments for more info. I am in Spotsylvania, Virginia, USA. I believe we have similar weather. I will seek out a small green house for the winters! And pray for patience!! : D
The easiest cactus ever to grow from the seeds. Very resilient compared to the others. Yet, it is true those small plants grow quite slowly.
TQ for this information.
True:-)
About how many fruits can a plants like this produce! ? On average/ year?
40-100 per wave @@mariememenemi1318
When you mentioned the flower, the novel "Cereus Blooms at Night" came to mind. Gorgeous! Great video!
Wow, what an incredible video! 🌱🐉 Watching the entire journey of dragon fruit growth from seed to bountiful harvest was both mesmerizing and educational. Your dedication to sharing such detailed knowledge is truly commendable. As a home gardener, I can't thank you enough for providing such a valuable resource. Your step-by-step guide and insights are going to be a game-changer for all of us looking to cultivate our own dragon fruit. Hats off to your expertise and generosity in sharing it with the world. You've earned yourself a subscriber and a fan for life! 🌵🍇👏
🤝 Thank you 🙏
NOW I KNOW WHY THEY ARE SO EXPENSIVE......THANKS FOR THIS INFORMATIVE VIDEO....:)
I love dragon fruit. I live in southern Arizona and will try this out. I love growing my own food. There is an euphoric feeling that I get by going outside and cooking from my own garden. I can't wait until I have my own dragon fruit to pick for a nice dessert.
I live in southern AZ too. Have lots of small df plants. No fruits yet. I'm trying to figure out how to keep them safe from the occasional freeze when they get big. They do appreciate shade cloth and more water than typical cactus. Good luck.
@@everyone8043 ok. So can I plant them in the ground or keep them in pots. Cause I'm going to buy the plant from someone. And I'm thinking of making multiple plants from the same plant just like people do with aloe vera. I just need to know if I should keep them in side pots or backyard with 24 hour shade? Can someone help me.
Best video ever on propagating any cactus. Such attention to detail!
Thanks 💐
That's a big time commit crop. As I watched your dedication and application of processes determined by the growth stage of each plant, it occurred to me that the first cultivators (South American, I think.) must have been just as committed and tied to their crops. We know now about their Terra Preta (Black Soil) and that the indigenous farmers didn't just wait for nature to produce their food, but used technology to create the conditions that actually enable food forests to exist. Then thinking of the commitment of ancient farmers, I can't imagine that they would have been at all interested in abandoning their crops to go off and fight as soldiers in expansionist wars. Maybe gardening cultivates peace every bit as much as prosperity and good health for all humanity and should be encouraged for everyone, especially urban dwellers. Anyway, thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience in growing Dragon Fruit. I can see it was a labor of love to nurture your plants through their entire life cycle. THAT is impressive. You earned lots of good karma merits just for that alone! By now, you must have earned enough merit to get to Brahmaloka!
the first cultivators were from the mediterranean/middle east area
@@bellosardo84
Wikipedia, Pineapple
Precolonial cultivation
The wild plant originates from the Paraná-Paraguay River drainages between southern Brazil and Paraguay.[2][18][19] Little is known about its domestication, but it spread as a crop throughout South America. Archaeological evidence of cultivation/use is found as far back as 1200 - 800 BC (3200-2800 BP) in Peru[20] and 200BC - AD700 (2200-1300 BP) in Mexico,[21] where it was cultivated by the Mayas and the Aztecs.[22] By the late 1400s, cropped pineapple was widely distributed and a stable component of the diet of Native Americans. The first European to encounter the pineapple was Columbus, in Guadeloupe on 4 November 1493.[23][24] The Portuguese took the fruit from Brazil and introduced it into India by 1550.[25] The 'Red Spanish [es]' cultivar was also introduced by the Spanish from Latin America to the Philippines, and it was grown for textile use from at least the 17th century.[26]
Columbus brought the plant back to Spain and called it piña de Indes, meaning "pine of the Indians". The pineapple was documented in Peter Martyr's Decades of the New World (1516) and Antonio Pigafetta's Relazione del primo viaggio intorno al mondo (1524-1525), and the first known illustration was in Oviedo's Historia General de Las Indias (1535).[27]
I think you're laying it on a little thick lol
Thank you so very much for this video! It turns out my mother was cutting out the fruit before it turned red, and she thought it was just a flower that had wilted lol! Best video ever! And they way you stand them up, ingenious!
Funny 😊
What an amazingly comprehensive video. Thank you so much for taking the time to explain everything.
Thanks 🙏
Boy, if dragon fruits aren't the most beautiful fruits inside-out that I've seen then I don't what is 💙
These aren't even the ones that are red inside.
@@SmallSpoonBrigade red one's sweeter or what
Don't give much in return of the effort you put onto these
The blooming of the dragon fruit flowers are beautiful, thank you.
Best channel I must say. No time wastage!
I'm looking for the right video to propagate my Dragon fruit plant into new pots, through stem cutting.. finally i have found a very useful and good video, thanks a lot 🙏😊
Wow you are the best gardening TH-camr ever. You explain everything very well can't wait for another video to be release
Hats off to you man . From know i am 100% shure that this person can grown anything in this whole world.
I love this channel. Just started gardening (have a dwarf lemon tree) and even though I cannot grow dragon fruits in my region (climate here can get pretty cold ), I enjoy your videos. Keep up the awesome work.
Try making greenhouse, it might be a little hard to set it up, but if you could make it, you can grow tropical plants. It's worth it.
@@IxoraNera I have thought about that, definitely will try it out!!! Thanks!
Grow in your windows at home 😊
Thank you for your time and patience making this video.
It's the most exotic and beautiful fruit I've ever seen.
First like and comment from Bangladesh 🇧🇩
Thank you so much 💐
@@urbangardeningofficial Thank you for the reply
Thank you for this video. I've been looking for a simple way to trellis my plant and so far your video shows the simplest way to trellis.
Happy Gardening 🤝
Thank you for the video. Very educational.
I bought seeds a while back thinking it was chia seeds and unfortunately ate them all with ice cream.
This made me smile, thank you ❤️ (I’m sorry you lost your seeds though)
Thank you for the good information, this really help me to understand how to grow this dragon fruit .
I will apply your good advices
Your videos are FANTASTIC, explain in such details, and love how organic everything you plant is! Loved to also learn about the natural pesticide from your tomato growing video! Thank you for sharing your amazing know-how!
Wow....nice view...Your growing fruits in small pot that also full of fruits...thats amazing...beautiful 😍🤩⚘🌷🌼🌻🐤🐥🐦🐣🍇🍈🍊🍋🥭🍎🍏🍐🍑🍅😊👍
Very well explained !!! And Beautifully presented you explained every thing with the best way Thanks for sharing such a informative video with us
My favourite gardening channel forever !!!!! 😊
Thank you Deepa ji 💐🤝
Jhkkkkksk
Kkkk
This was the very best how to grow dragonftuit video. Thank you🤗
This is fantastic! My friend swears it is impossible to grow a fruiting dragonfruit plant in a container. I can't wait to prove him wrong lol.
Use big containers and provide some support for the plant to climb on 🤝💐
@@urbangardeningofficial I actually have a couple of bamboo rods and am getting a huge planter either today or tomorrow 😁
Ayo how's the plant going
@@YamiLunaria it's just started pushing out new growth this past week.
@@missymom53525 niceeee
The finest video regarding dragon fruit cultivation
Wow soo much patience needed 😍
🤝💐
You know what they say, the best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago but the second best time is now
cristopher wong When I do that, most of the time my plants die. 😂
@@jangstarchannel256 😂😂😂 #epic #indeed
Me encantó tu dedicación..voy a probar plantar de menos tres y luego te platico como me fué gracias por mostrar tu talento❤️ desde Guadalajara Ja.🇲🇽🤗
Thank you. This is my 2nd time watching your video. Before giving you a like, I've viewed at least 20 videos on the subject (I tend to go OCD on research...). Yours is the one I will use as reference. Not a single piece of information was superfluous. Please, never give us less. In fact, more information can only increase trust and loyalty to your channel (I think... or maybe it's just me). So, thank you for a great video.
By the way, it's fruit bats that pollinate dragon fruits. I can only assume that moths and other nocturnal insects also contribute.
Nice video 1000 th comment🔥🔥👍
Thanks
Your dedication is appreciated 🙏😊
Excellent video!!! (& so delightfully relaxing to watch)
Dragon fruit are truely natures work of art!
Couldn't agree more
I have learnt so much from u since I subscribed. Thank you.
I have no idea how I got on this video but I was panicking but this took my mind off it. 100% I appreciate this video. Maybe I'll grow a dragon fruit plant 🌵
This is amazing i love this video!! Dragon fruit is getting real expensive so why not grow some 🤷🏻♀️i bought one just for the seeds to be able to plant it and grow more so thank you for this video!! I love how you didnt make us wait years for the end product and showed us everything step by step!!
용과가 선인장 🌵 열매였군요.
첨 알았어요.
감사합니다.🤗👍👍👍
Nice information, thanks for your video, so learning to plant a dragon fruit!❤😍 more power to your channel
Eres un experto y tienes mucha paciencia para explicar todo. 5 🌟 para ti. X tu valioso trabajo. Me enseñaste mucho en este video. Muchas gracias
Your videos are equally informative AND soothing. You’re like a garden whisperer, w/ the greenest of thumbs! Your skills are so magical to me. ✨
Thank you for sharing your knowledge in such an enjoyable and easily-understandable format.
Appreciate your time, patience and hard work. Thanks for sharing detailed results till the end. Superb, amazing work 👍 👏👏👏
Thanks 🙏
This video is perfect for a visual learner like me. Great job!
Garden itu pasir atau tnah
True 😊
Awesome video. You explained all needed information in 10 minutes. Amazing, sir, amazing. 🤸🏾♀️💯❤️
Epic video, thank you! I didn't know clippings could grow so much faster, looking into doing this now because of you!
Do it :-)
First time I understand the process. My first batch failed maybe too much rain (Central Florida) and not enough sun. Turned black at bottom and rotted away. Have cuttings drying out now and will try again. Thanks
🤝
In Mexico they're called "Pitayas" or "Tunas de Tasajo" we used to live off of these when we lived there. Thanks for the video!
🤝
I found this to be the Best and most useful among some 14 vedio I watched. 👍
Thank you for sharing your trellis idea. It seems easily done and you can have flowers at multiple levels.
We’ll explained and easy to understand this method of gardening. Thanks video maker 😊.
Wow very interesting video sir it is really different topic and is very informative.😊👏👌👍
Thanks for sharing.
Wow beautiful flowers... appreciate...your patience in giving time to time updates...thank you...
One of the videos where you see the results. Amazing. Keep it up!
One of the best videos I've seen regarding growing the dragon plant in pots. Could you please share the potting mix percentages
50% GARDEN SOIL 30% CATTLE MANURE AND 20% RIVER SAND
I love dragon fruit! We always buy organic ones when there was still a farmer's market. It's the sweetest variety we have ever tasted!!! It's heartbreaking that it had to be paused because of the pandemic. Now I don't know where to get organic dragon fruit!! Huhuhu...
How about ordering online 😊🤭
Hallo Janelle - Travels Where do you live? We have lots of Dragon Fruits plants & it’s Organic,in my Home province mostly every Household have Dragon fruits plants in their garden or backyard,its easy to grow & bear fruits twice a year
@@tonystranger4899 we tried ordering online but they won't deliver ripe ones. The sellers always rip us off
@@citaagustin1890 we live in Manila
@@citaagustin1890 That sounds magical
Thank you for sharing your knowledge good Sir, May God bless you 🙏☺️ - Hello from Malaysia 🇲🇾
You are very welcome 🤝 💐 Happy Gardening
Well done... thank you. The music was a nice touch.
Perfect video from start to end..👍
Really appreciate this sir...TQ.
Thank you for a clear and concise instructional video.
Living in central Florida I was unaware until recently that dragon fruit were suited to grow here. Since pineapples grow like weeds here if you just stick the green tops in the ground I am hopeful that with some cuttings from a friends plant the dragon fruit will be the same.
Best Luck!
Do it 😊
No words to say but I really want to say your love towards plants and it is pure and Hard work and patience i hope you will do more number of videos and keep educating us towards gardening totally in an urban world
Thank you for sharing this!
Does anyone know if this plant bears fruit all year round when mature or does it have a season?
They do not produce all year long....they normally bear fruit during rainy season ...here in India may to September is the fruiting season
Thank you for that 8nfo!
this is a wonderful no nonsense video, kudos to you and hope your channel grows big :D
I absolutely love this guy he is so
Informative I can’t stop watching videos lol
Hi.some varities are 4 sides evet 5 sides.do these dragon fruits can produce fruit.
Took 3 years to make a 10 minute video. Thank you!
Watching from palawan ..thank you so much for shareng ur video God bless you always sir
Woooow! That's really really really great 😱
Bro you put a lot of effort for all your videos appreciate your work 👌👌
Thanks 💐
Thank you for showing ... now I know exactly how to do it all my dragon fruit back home👍👏
someone gave me two young dragon fruit plants in a small improvised pot. one of them had just a single segment and the other had 2.
they have grown specially the older one. lately i've noticed A LOT of growth.
now the younger has 3 segments and the oldest is growing into a full plant with 4 central segments and several more segments branching.
this weekend i moved them each to their own pot and built a structure around them for support.
made the exact mix of soul you suggest.
the only thing is that the pots i found are somewhat smaller than the one you use, but i'm giving each individual plant its own pot so hopefully they will be ok.
it was difficult to transplant them because the previous pot was too small for two plants and there were roots everywhere, i had to gently untangle them and loosen them. so far they seem to still be alive. so i'll take that as a good sign.
How are your baby dragon fruits doing?
@@delaraalaaeldin8669
they are huge.
one of them had a single flower. i manually pollinated it(dont trust the pollinators with the one shot i got).....but it didnt become a fruit.
the other plant had 3 buds sometime later. two of them fell off...one because a flower and the night it opoened i was there manually pollinating it.
this time it looked like it was gonna fruit, but it also fell off.
then came a terrible heat wave that lasted months....and the plants started turning a bit yellowy.......but eventually the wave passed and the plants started recovering. they are having new growth. so i take that as a good sign....maybe by next season they will produce.
i dont know what variety they are, so i dont know if the flowers are self-fertile.
i dont even know if both are the same variety.
@@delaraalaaeldin8669
also, thanks for asking :)
@@sabin97Actually the progress you said is fair enough to keep waiting and trying with it maybe it will grow multiple fruits by next season who knows, and man it BLOOMED! That's really awesome
@@sabin97 Thanks for replying with such details, so sweet of you♡
And may I ask where you live as I really wanna try planting it but I don't know if the weather is suitable.
We don't have dragon fruits here in Egypt I bought an imported one yesterday and it was sooo expensive I saved the seeds and gonna try planting it later wish me luck!
Wow it's look majestic
Your work and patience is incredible
good information! i'm saving this in my agriculture list.
i have two young plants, will eventually need to transplant them. i dont trust my memory.
thank you for sharing your knowledge
🤝😊
One of the best vdo 4 d patience, hats off 2 U. :-) .
Really fantastic 👌💕
Wow great, that's awesome, thank you for sharing the details correctly and clearly 👌👍
Glad it was helpful!
mine is 4 years old, no fruit.... i didnt put much sunlight. Great Video. I will divide the mother plant now.
Shift the plant in full sun ...without sun it will never produce ....and to force fruiting cut the top 2 inch part of the stem during the season
Urban Gardening i’ll do that this week. it was kept under a shade for years.
Also ty for ur hard work for these videos becase I’m also about to make a mini fruit garden so maybe this will be my next option. Good job👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Thanks
These videos are sooo satisfying, I love to watch this
Thank you for your patience and support us to grow May you continue this plants🌵🌵🌵 based product to grow which will make our world harmony without harming to animals.Love from Bhutan
Thank you 🤝💐
This is so cool! It's too cold here in New England to keep this plant without a greenhouse, but thanks for sharing! Maybe one day I'll be able to keep one :)
Great 💐 hopefully one day 🤝
keep in your windows, outdoor in summer
I love that knife 🔪 cuts real smooth. I got a lot out of your video. I would love to see a from seed start from you. But I’m very happy with this video. 👍🏾👍🏾
great tips sarji 👍
One of the best videos I have seen!
Happy Gardening 🤝
I wish you showed the progress on the propagation with seeds as well
he said that would take 3-5 years wtf
@@alipambudi9641 I tried to propagate from seeds but all of them died. It was the worst 😭😭
Wow I'm so impressed with this video! thank you so much for teaching us the proper way! I live in Nevada so we get a lot of sun hoping to do it successfully!
Your cacti and succulent collection is impressive , too
Thanks 💐
Great information, I love Dragon Fruit, they are delicious. I want to try to find a Couple of cuttings to try to grow my own indoors.
You the best. I have just started growing dragonfruit. Now I gotta ask you. I love the space saving style you have grown it. Even i dont want a huge tall plant. I have also come across the style where dragonfruit plant grows an umbrella canopy. What do you recommend one should do?
Umbrella canopy style is very productive but it needs a fixed support ..which is difficult to build in a pot
@Beardie Land how are you making the trellis structure (what material) and what is the size of the pot. Will help me a lot if you will please share this information. Ty
Great teaching Sir! Learned a lot from you while I'm eating a red variety of it. I saw this when browsing for a tutorial video of planting it. Thank you very much. ♥️ T'was great! We have an awesome GOD and He amazes me while looking at your video and separating the seeds from the flesh of the one I'm eating right now. GOD bless you! 🙏💖 I'm gonna try to do your tips on these seeds later 🌱😊
Enjoy 😊
As a gardener from his grandmother Cacti farm in Mexico, I really am reminded of my days with her. She's in her mid 80's right now.
Ur hardwork is to impressive ...❤ ...
Good work
Hi, After seeded plants grow can their stems be used to regrow, “will that regrown plant fruit after 1 year “??? I intend to grow commercially can you advise how to go about ?
Yes after seeded plant mature and give fruits u can use it's steam to grow and it will grow faster and will give fruit in 6months or 1 year
I have enjoyed watching and learning from your dragon fruit videos. I also have planted dragon fruit cuttings few year ago but I didn't know that it can bear fruit within a year. Gladly this year it bear fruit, maybe unknowingly I have induced it because I made some trimmings, coz it already have lot's of stems. Now I know I can help it produce more =) thanks!
Defintely well explained! thank you for sharing what you do with passion and also some information. Keep posting good content. We liked the facts that you shared.
It's time, it's adventure.
True!
My best friend, Made an excellent video. I really liked it. Beauty is extraordinary. Thank you very much for the video.
Thank you! Cheers 🙏