Growing a Honey Mango Seed, Days 0-12

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  • čas přidán 20. 07. 2018
  • The honey mango goes by many names, such as the young, baby, yellow, honey, Ataúlfo, Adaulfo, Adolfo, or champagne mango. It is a cultivar from Mexico first grown by Ataulfo Morales Gordillo. The shape is atypical and much smaller than the typical cultivars people eat. In my first ever eating of a honey mango I managed to cut a good seed out of its coat and try a new methodology I developed for germination.
    I cut a large plastic 2 Liter bottle at the top with heavy duty scissors, then inverted the bottle top and taped it in place with packaging tape. I filled the inverted top with several wads of plastic wrap, leaving a large hole in the center, and positioned my seed so that the root tip would grow over the hole below. I sprayed distilled water onto the seed and sealed the top of the setup with plastic wrap, and sprayed some more water inside every 2 days or so.
    On the twelfth day I decided it was the appropriate time to do a transplant into potting mix. My chosen mix, prepared 2 days prior and allowed time to dry out in the sun, contained used potting mix, clay soil, fresh organic material from the previous plant growing series, as well as blended mango seeds. I have seen considerable success with established plants by pouring mango seed smoothies on top and letting the nutrients trickle down into the soil with successive waterings, so I decided to take the additional step of pre-mixing it into the dirt beforehand. I decided not to water on the day of the transplant to prevent the clay and other materials from cementing onto the root system, opting instead to let the roots continue their development in all directions in this loose, fluffy, granular mix that I made.
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 279

  • @8298julie
    @8298julie Před rokem +6

    I just tried this method and now have a tiny mango seedling! So happy!

    • @mommaof3_1983
      @mommaof3_1983 Před 11 měsíci

      I'm just starting mine too, how's yours looking? I'm so excited to have this work out! Thanks Melvin for the video! ❤ You got a new sub HERE. Hope you all are having a great day!

  • @rebeccamoyer9358
    @rebeccamoyer9358 Před měsícem +2

    I just soaked the seed in water for a few days, took the outer hull off the seed, wrapped it in a wet paper towel, put it in a plastic bag in my pantry then forgot about it. I was looking for my cornmeal when I saw it sprouted up. I was like “what is that?!” I’m not used to plants that are this eager to grow 😂

  • @adlap0152
    @adlap0152 Před 3 lety +15

    You should ALWAYS water after transplanting. Even if in moist soil. It removes air bubbles in the soil which can harm the roots.

  • @wiseherb1426
    @wiseherb1426 Před 4 lety +10

    Absolute best mango germination set up I’ve seen yet, and I’ve been researching!

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 4 lety +3

      The Happy Homebody let me tell you I know a friend which has a better method, her name is Mother Nature. I’ve experimented & found the best method is in a huge pot. Shallow plant the seed right in the middle & water twice a day in hot summer. Got fruit from 2 seed grown in 2 years.

  • @lemonyskunkketts7781
    @lemonyskunkketts7781 Před 3 lety +8

    I love this mango. Serve it cold. It's not the sweetest but incredibly refreshing.

  • @RobBackyardGardenerr
    @RobBackyardGardenerr Před 6 lety +37

    Great start Melvin. I’ve tried to grow mangos in all sorts of ways - some worked for a while and others didn’t. I love the visible part of this method and will give it a try on my next attempt. Thanks again - can’t wait until the next update!

    • @courtneystuart9265
      @courtneystuart9265 Před 6 lety +6

      Rob Backyard Gardenerr hey I watch your channel!! Cool

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety +9

      Hey Rob, mango seeds are really difficult to germinate and keep alive, so many people have told me that their seedlings would die just like mine did in 2017. Getting a guaranteed fast start this way is great, rather than waiting while failed attempts take up pots and yard space. It also allows for natural root & shoot growth & orientation ready for transplant, unlike the wet paper towel in a zipper bag method.

    • @RobBackyardGardenerr
      @RobBackyardGardenerr Před 6 lety +3

      Melvin Wei when’s the next update?

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety +8

      Hi Rob, unfortunately the plant died from a fungal infection just 4 days later, but I already had a large regular mango seed germination underway at the time. I'm making another video on that after maybe another month.

    • @RobBackyardGardenerr
      @RobBackyardGardenerr Před 6 lety +4

      Melvin Wei okay. I have failed several times as well. Looks like I might have one that’ll make it though!!

  • @bodoorgeest
    @bodoorgeest Před 4 lety +3

    I covered the seeds (4) with cotton pads and sprayed it about twice a week. I had it in a plastic container on the top of my boiler in the attic. They all rooted. This was my third attempt, siplock bag failed, soil failed. You are right about the paper towels getting the seeds moldy. Gonna try your method as well. Thnks for the upload!

  • @lazyh-online4839
    @lazyh-online4839 Před 6 lety +20

    The Ataulfo mangos your growing is a hybrid variety, so depending upon how it was pollinated you could get all sorts of different kinds of mature plants once they grow. My own particular germination method is with a damp paper towel then in a bag, if you use pure reverse osmosis water with freshly harvested seed and clean shears to cut the seed she'll open I've never once had a problem with mold growth, even the ones I forgot for 2 weeks too long. Key point is straight from fruit to ground. The Mangos also don't need any kind of fertilizer until about a week or two after first true leaves, the nutrients it does need comes from the seed itself. The roots get very strong with this method in my (admittedly somewhat limited) experience. You may have heard the saying "mangos thrive on neglect".

    • @moniquegebeline4350
      @moniquegebeline4350 Před 5 lety +7

      I find those mangos superior in taste ! I just bought 5 and going to try again my first one germinated great and grew then the damn dog ate it lol.

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 4 lety +2

      LazyH-Online totally agree, I’ve had excellent results with paper towel method & straight in soil right after eating.

    • @carlwest
      @carlwest Před 4 lety +4

      Monoembryonic seeds produce one seedling, which will not be a clone of the mother tree that your fruit came from. It may be a better variety, or it may not grow very well. Polyembryonic seeds produce multiple embryos, and only one will be a hybrid. For example, if you have five seedlings, only one of them will be a hybrid, and the rest will be clones of the mother tree that your fruit came from.

    • @lazyh-online4839
      @lazyh-online4839 Před 4 lety

      @@carlwest correct

    • @user-pb9ve7ji5b
      @user-pb9ve7ji5b Před 2 lety

  • @PiXeLSusY
    @PiXeLSusY Před 4 lety +9

    I've attemped once during the summer the plant started growing within 3 months, but due to certain circumstances couldn't take care of the plant so it died. However I've started a new one 3 weeks ago, the seed was all white. After the first week the tip turned pink, and on the second week the root started forming. The plant is on the 3rd week now and the root is growing slowly. Wish me luck 😊💕

    • @NMW80
      @NMW80 Před 3 lety

      How is your mango plant going?

    • @PiXeLSusY
      @PiXeLSusY Před 3 lety +1

      @@NMW80 unfortunately the leaves started to turn brown and dry, than started to loose leaves last month and it died. Probably due to change in temperature as it is really cold out here in UK. But i was really happy to watch it grow it had 4 different layers of leaves. How is your one doing?

    • @NMW80
      @NMW80 Před 3 lety +1

      @@PiXeLSusY my seedlings are still babies and just germinating now all have roots showing and turning pink etc too. I hope they make it in our winter too cos it can get cold where I am in Australia I’m in cool temperate zone so I know what it’s like to not be able to grow tropical plants outside. But I have a greenhouse I’m hoping it will make it in the greenhouse for winter 🤞🙏
      What is your climate called in UK? I know it gets quite cold there but does it snow in winter? Do you get many frosts?

  • @sadierussell526
    @sadierussell526 Před měsícem

    Thank you so much for this information I germinate my honey mango seed just as you explained and I successfully got 3 seeds to be planted , I’m so happy to see how it turned out .

  • @younginsong4355
    @younginsong4355 Před 5 lety +6

    I like you because you show all the failures. We all learn from those failures. Good learning.

  • @MrKiet76
    @MrKiet76 Před 5 lety +4

    That looks like riverside Cali. You got perfect weather to grow mangoes if you live in Cali

  • @crisalidathomassie1811
    @crisalidathomassie1811 Před 3 lety +5

    Thanks for the video. I normally place my seed in wet paper towel cover it and place it in a ziplock bag. 30 days later I have small leaves. I’m waiting a bit longer before I plant them. Great idea and I like the bottle method. Blessings and be safe.

    • @glitterme5419
      @glitterme5419 Před 5 měsíci +2

      Thanks I just started and most of them talking about mold after I seen successful videos of no mold. My beans are sprouting already.

  • @meeramanimaran7179
    @meeramanimaran7179 Před 5 lety +7

    Thanks for the tips. I hv followed this steps successfully n got 5 mango plants.

  • @noahtavares306
    @noahtavares306 Před 6 lety +7

    I’m growing 2 mangos from seed rn, at first I had them in shot glasses with a tiny bit of water, now I have them in paper towel in a baggy. The root have started in a day for one, the other seed already had a big root. Either tomorrow or the next day I’m putting them into a plastic cup with good draining and then into a bigger pot and u should understand, lol. MISS UR OLD MANGO SEIRES

    • @lazyh-online4839
      @lazyh-online4839 Před 6 lety

      Just be careful with pot size. The roots will easily get root rot if the container is too big because there will be too much soil to hold water. The smaller pots allow the roots to absorb all the water. You're doing good with well draining soil. I've seen a 4 foot mango tree looking pretty darn happy in a tiny looking six inch clay pot, the leaves spread about 3 feet across and made the pot look like a little dot in comparison!!! 😆

    • @omerahmadijaza2-145
      @omerahmadijaza2-145 Před 3 lety

      Man my mango seed rots with paper towel method. How did you do it?

  • @byronliu680
    @byronliu680 Před 5 lety +13

    Lol, honey mango are actually my favorite cultivar

  • @StanTheObserver-lo8rx
    @StanTheObserver-lo8rx Před 5 lety +3

    One of the best for the San Francisco bay area. Dark green and glossy foliage. A little slow to adapt to clay soils...just don't give up on it.

  • @normanschwartz2992
    @normanschwartz2992 Před 5 lety +2

    This mango looks exactly like Mangos my neighbor just gave me and we are in Miami!! They are DELICIOUS!!!!

  • @brandasar7913
    @brandasar7913 Před 5 lety +1

    I used your method, it grows fast. Thank you..

  • @lesliem4123
    @lesliem4123 Před 5 lety +5

    Interesting approach, I think I'll try it. You had 2 tap roots because you were lucky that your seed had two plants. The seed is plenty of food for the seedling for a good while. Plants are like moms, they send their babies out into the world with a packed lunch. Best of luck on your next try.

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 5 lety +3

      Packed lunch 🍔🍲🥗, that comment made me smile 😄

  • @Zennofobic
    @Zennofobic Před 5 lety

    I read somewhere that Ataulfo mangos are often poly-embryonic (multiple shoots) and the strongest shoot will often be an exact clone of the parent and you can expect fruit within 3 years. I happen to like champagne mangos because of their size and soft skin. I've got 4 seedlings in pots as we speak. Escondido here, howdy neighbor.

  • @noahtavares306
    @noahtavares306 Před 5 lety +6

    When’s the next video coming out?

  • @whytedaisesify
    @whytedaisesify Před 6 lety

    Thank you, always enjoy your videos

  • @northascrowsfly
    @northascrowsfly Před 3 lety

    I held my breath while your hands shook. 😳🌱

  • @debraarizona4809
    @debraarizona4809 Před 5 lety +22

    That method seems to work.
    For me that's a bit much! but an awesome idea!!😊
    I use the paper towel method it works great!!🌱🌱🌱
    I can spray my seed(s) and forget about them for a few days.😏
    The seed (s) do not smell nor grow mold,must be luck!!
    Thank you for sharing🤗🌹

    • @animeedits6047
      @animeedits6047 Před 4 lety

      Same but do you have to be wetting the paper towel once a week or no?

  • @seekeroftruth19
    @seekeroftruth19 Před 4 lety +1

    BEAUTIFUL JOB!

  • @bilalraja6745
    @bilalraja6745 Před 5 lety +15

    Adding worms will help speed up the braking down process of the home made fertilizer, they eat it and poop it out clean in micro sized bits small enough for roots to absorb. it's the complete opposite of our systems it's not toxic at all, the roots can then absorb the nutrients much easier and quicker since its been micro sized by the worms. the tunneling of the worms will give the roots ventilation to absorb oxygen from the air for faster, healtier and better growth of leafs and fruit it will speed up the fruiting process by heck of a lot and also since the worms are eating all of the home made fertilizer you don't have to worry about unprocessed fertilizer to turn into mould or green stuff that grows on the sides of the pots or vase. When fertilizing watch out for root rot it can generate unwanted bad germs that feed on healthy roots causing them to rot and kill your plants. It can spread to other plants and even waste your soil making it toxic to use for transplantation and even for any organic life like bugs and bees and insects it will kill all small organic lifes! And it smells very bad like sewage bad .....Yuk!

    • @MrNiceCobra
      @MrNiceCobra Před 2 měsíci

      Bad suggestion. Worms will eat plant roots and kill the plant quickly. I had many house plants and outdoor plants in containers killed by worms. You know worms in the pot when your plant is not doing well and there is coffee ground like poop coming out of the bottom holes. I have to soak the whole container in mix of water with citrus scent dishwasher liquid added to drive them out of soil. You will see them coming out from the top or bottom holes.
      And then repeat few times because they lay eggs.
      This way you may save your plant if it's not too late.

  • @thecrusadesofbangbang
    @thecrusadesofbangbang Před 2 měsíci

    I have about 5 polyembryonic seeds in paper towel in a ziploc bag but after watching this, i think i made a mistake lol.
    Great video!!!

  • @lucrative11
    @lucrative11 Před 6 lety +2

    Make sure it doesn't get too much direct sunlight in your new location! Good luck!

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety

      So far so good, I hope it stays that way. I get 4+ hours of morning sun now overlooking a courtyard full of big plants rather than overlooking a hot parking lot in afternoon sun, so that's a big difference for my plants. If I fail at some point, at least I have this new method to guarantee quick and successful restarts.

  • @ThatPlantGuy246
    @ThatPlantGuy246 Před rokem

    lmao when they turned on the blender my heart stopped

  • @Penutbutter360
    @Penutbutter360 Před 4 lety

    Is there a more videos for the honey mango series?

  • @TheMelvinWei
    @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety +4

    Hello everyone, unfortunately the plant died from a fungal infection just 4 days later, but I already had a large regular mango seed germination underway at the time (the new method I developed for mango seed germination in this video allows for any number of low maintenance guaranteed attempts in the future, so it doesn't make sense to dwell on failures, but rather to restart the process). I'm making another video on that after maybe another month. I'm making a big shift in how I run my channel from now on: I'll be releasing long footage compilations that cover a lot of time instead of initial plant growing series episodes that cover just a few days. Also, check out my channel homepage's Community tab for photos and comments about the series and the direction of the channel! It's a new feature on CZcams that seems much more sensible than trying to update a FaceBook page with hardly any following, or a page on some other social media platform.

    • @abdovitamins6331
      @abdovitamins6331 Před 5 lety

      😢😢

    • @ram5ramen582
      @ram5ramen582 Před 5 lety +2

      Next time you have a fungal infection. Try to pour hydrogen peroxide on the dirt. Might as well try if it will die because I tried it and it actually worked

  • @bradleybruvva3021
    @bradleybruvva3021 Před 5 lety

    I scrubbed my mango pit with a dish brush to get all the exes mango off and dried it out for a couple days. Then I cut the seed out and it was very easy, very satisfying. Was careful not to let the seed inside dry out. I just put mine in a bag with some plastic wrap. I also watered it with about 1:4 hydrogen peroxide:water to kill any mold. Mine started to get growth overnight. Seed turned green really fast.

  • @JessBot
    @JessBot Před 5 lety +23

    update please! my mango seed is beginning to sprout and i am wonderinf if i should move it to soil as quickly as you did or wait a little longer

    • @nathansmith8889
      @nathansmith8889 Před 3 lety +4

      You can plant it, but only burry the root because the seed may rot

    • @szecr
      @szecr Před 3 lety +4

      @@nathansmith8889 you're two years late

    • @kaylaa1829
      @kaylaa1829 Před 2 lety

      @@szecr ikr

  • @brianmorgan4627
    @brianmorgan4627 Před 5 lety

    XI bought this giant Mango at smart and final it was huge , I put it in a brown paper bag and put it in the pantry I just ate it ! It was the best one I've ever had ! It was excellent

  • @analeeweaver4109
    @analeeweaver4109 Před 4 lety +3

    I just started mine yesterday, hopefully I can get it to sprout 🌱.

    • @NMW80
      @NMW80 Před 3 lety +1

      I just started mine couple days ago. How is your seed going?

    • @analeeweaver4109
      @analeeweaver4109 Před 3 lety +1

      @@NMW80 it's now about 3 inches tall

    • @NMW80
      @NMW80 Před 3 lety +1

      Analee Weaver awesome 👍

  • @FCT8306onTwoWheels
    @FCT8306onTwoWheels Před měsícem

    Good stuff man. I germinate my honey mango seeds in the moist paper towel and ziploc bag, I planted one that Id began to germinate on the 9th of the month and when I went to check on it two days ago it was looking wild like a viking ship with two horns. One was the shoot and the other that was growing along the side of the seed was all spiny and stuff. Shoot on it is like 6 inches tall already having been in soil only a couple of days. Got a bunch of avocado seedlings too but those take months to germinate and grow

  • @adamb.8854
    @adamb.8854 Před 4 lety

    Hi, i bought today an Ataulfo/Honey mango. If multiple shoots are coming out, they are usually polyembrionic, so true to type regardless of variety. But usually Ataulfo is poly. Some people say the stongest shoot is from fertilisation, and the weaker shoots are from the mother plant, someone says the opposite.

  • @christinaphyl
    @christinaphyl Před 6 lety +10

    Just put the rooted side of the seed in a shot glass half filled with water..... leave it on a sunny window... doesn't have to be this complicated lol.

    • @abdovitamins6331
      @abdovitamins6331 Před 5 lety

      I wanted to say this, it is complicated way a little bit but pretty.

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 4 lety +1

      Christina Phyl even your process is interesting & would be successful but all you really need to do is in hot summer put it in soil & water twice a day.

  • @CerulianSins
    @CerulianSins Před 5 lety

    how do you keep the temperature constant? do you have a heating mat in there?

  • @blanchedcosta2416
    @blanchedcosta2416 Před 4 lety

    So such a big plastic bag for a small mango amazing🤩😍

  • @Zennofobic
    @Zennofobic Před 5 lety

    i'm germinating a few trying the bottle method but instead of using wet saran wrap, I cut up a rapid rooter plug into small cubes and I plugged up the inverted bottle mouth with another rooter plug to wick up the water that I fill up the bottle with, working great so far.. the seed sits on a moist bed of chopped up rooter cubes that is wicked by another rooter cube plugging the hole. Just need to figure out what to do if I want to let the taproot grow through the rooter plug

  • @ellenayu
    @ellenayu Před 4 lety +1

    can you give us an update on this?

  • @touringreggaelive
    @touringreggaelive Před 5 lety +3

    love the video and your scientific approach, I heard you say fertilizer that is a no no in my experience of propagating mangoes from seed. it has everything it needs for about a year straight! most of my failed ventures involve unnecessary fertilization even it the seed grows the effects of the fertilizer will become apparent

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 4 lety +1

      Mackain Logan absolutely agree, sad thing is not many people know you don’t need a complex scientific setup for mango to grow if you live in a climate with hot summers. Just put it straight in soil & water twice a day as I got fruit off 2 seed grown in 2 years this way. Planted in ground second year after first winter.

  • @rebootukology1014
    @rebootukology1014 Před 2 lety

    Thank you

  • @mysticsworld8635
    @mysticsworld8635 Před 5 lety +1

    Where is EP. 2???

  • @salimhmooed7253
    @salimhmooed7253 Před 5 lety

    Thanks

  • @saquinacapurchande5714

    Fine. I'm going to try.
    Congratulations from Portugal

  • @tastytechaddictsmtb
    @tastytechaddictsmtb Před 6 lety +4

    The seed is polyembryonic. One of the plants is a clone of the mother, the other is a hybrid of the mother and father. Usually the clone will be the slower growing of the two.

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety +1

      After rewatching the footage a few times I realized that it looks like it's got at least 2 if not 3 plants? It would be a boon to see more shoots spring forth from the soil later. Honestly the parent fruit didn't taste too good, maybe the hybrids would be an improvement, haha.

    • @bryanrosado6757
      @bryanrosado6757 Před 6 lety +3

      Melvin Wei it didn’t taste so good because it wasn’t ripe. They taste pretty good when they’re fully ripe.

    • @moniquegebeline4350
      @moniquegebeline4350 Před 5 lety

      Iain Simpson do you just prune out the hybrid - the one I did only had one plant come up

    • @NMW80
      @NMW80 Před 3 lety

      Monique Gebeline your seed must have been a Monoembryonic one if only one plant.

  • @stanlygomez2450
    @stanlygomez2450 Před 4 lety

    Thank you very much sir

  • @fishrfriends5631
    @fishrfriends5631 Před 2 měsíci

    lmaooo I actually just started growing honey mangoes last week and was watching this video to compare my progress, and I also noticed that we have the exact same plates 😂 what a coincidence

    • @fishrfriends5631
      @fishrfriends5631 Před 2 měsíci

      update: I also have multiple of the same spray bottle haha

  • @FllrOfSonOfRageNLove
    @FllrOfSonOfRageNLove Před 4 lety +1

    Hello Melvin, Thanks for the wonderful video. I followed the instructions from this video and after about 15 days, I see the tap root. However I don't see any shoot popping out from the top. Do I have to wait till I see one before I plant it in a pot? Once again, I cannot thank you enough for this awesome video.

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 4 lety

      Hi Mouli, I would wait until a shoot appears. It may take longer or shorter than in my video, depending on the ripeness of the fruit you got the seed from, the maturity of the seed, and the temperature you germinated it at. In my later series I grew mine in a sand/clay soil mixture to prevent root rot.

    • @FllrOfSonOfRageNLove
      @FllrOfSonOfRageNLove Před 4 lety

      @@TheMelvinWei Thanks for your quick reply. Do you mean to say, growing in sand/clay mixer is better than using this technique? BTW, it was a juicy ripe fruit, but a small one. Not sure if that matters.

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 4 lety

      @@FllrOfSonOfRageNLove It saves a transplant later on. I do love this transparent method of growing in plastic because you can see what's going on and then transplant the successful seeds later on.

  • @zenin.ciaran
    @zenin.ciaran Před 4 lety

    Is the next episode out?

  • @mohamedyahya89
    @mohamedyahya89 Před 4 lety +3

    i just started with my Mango Seed few days ago and it looks going well. i will make more soon and i have Avocado also and it's awesome i will publish my videos sooooooon

  • @SyndicateX9
    @SyndicateX9 Před rokem

    I am currently trying this method for the first time. 1 seed in particular is doing very well. I started it in a 28oz container on 7/26 and potted it on 8/4 because it was already outgrowing the container. Today, on 8/7 there is a second stem emerging and the main one has grown 9". In 4 days!

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před rokem

      Wow that's fast growth! I wish your seedlings success. I'm currently growing a mango cutting.

    • @SyndicateX9
      @SyndicateX9 Před rokem

      @@TheMelvinWei Best of luck to you as well. It's probably worth mentioning that my seeds came from a hybrid tree.

    • @butter_5177
      @butter_5177 Před rokem

      Update?? 😮

  • @lenieramos1064
    @lenieramos1064 Před 3 lety

    Cool man thankyou

  • @OokamiSolstice92
    @OokamiSolstice92 Před 4 lety

    Also What happened to episode 2?

  • @StanTheObserver-lo8rx
    @StanTheObserver-lo8rx Před 5 lety

    By the way,Melvin.the wife just picked up more yellow mangoes at Sea Food City here in the bay area. So,to all..its the time of the season for them...get many,eat and then plant many. If I could go back in time? I for sure what have started more than three seeds..with 2 being weak and the last very strong.

  • @blessisrael6455
    @blessisrael6455 Před měsícem

    Beautiful; I love this idea ! Now there’s recent videos of putting the top of the seed in water like it’s drinking and it comes out like yours…. I tried it, it failed miserably; I believe from what you said, it’s the humidity in the water that grows them…..
    Btw, I had no idea that growing regular mangoes takes many years, but there’s another more expensive smaller all yellow mango (just saw in the store) that grows a double shoot, and much faster than a regular mango which is better if you want to grow an actual tree, but the purpose in buying it wouldn’t be to eat it; is that a honey mango, the one you have ? The seed looks like it’s a regular one….. thanks ! ; )

  • @gracielamancilla728
    @gracielamancilla728 Před 6 dny

    Thanks dude i have a mango tree now

  • @stamperthedooker4510
    @stamperthedooker4510 Před 2 lety

    I sprouted a mango seed with a 1 part hydrogen peroxide/2 parts water. I washed down the seed and put some of that same solution in the Ziploc bag (and i used cling wrap as opposed to paper towels).
    There was no mold, and i worked lile magic!

  • @jerryalicafe9390
    @jerryalicafe9390 Před 4 lety

    I just started my mango seed and follow ur tutorial 2020 i hope my mango seed will grow. thanks , how is your mango now? Do you already harvest the fruit

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 4 lety

      jerry alicafe put your seed in soil at first sight of germination. I got fruit from 2 seed grown mangos in 2 years (2 seasons) I first put it in a very large pot so the mango tap root has space. I brought the most premium fruit tree potting mix I could find & mixed it with sheep manure. This was done in hot summer, watered twice a day, early morning & after work. It was in this pot the first season, second season I planted it in ground late winter/early spring. It made a massive flower head & set a few fruit only 1 ripened till full sweet ripeness. I had 2 both had same results, each a different mango type.

  • @MM-vt3hf
    @MM-vt3hf Před 5 lety +8

    I grew a mango from seed and it's about 2-3 months old. It's still growing well and it's almost as big as my hand

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 4 lety

      Jr Pineda you sure? You lack experience or you’re probably referring to really cold climates where mango won’t ever grow or produce. I’m in a temperate climate with the usual 4 seasons & got fruit off 2 seed grown which both are a different variety in 2 years.

    • @subtitledEN
      @subtitledEN Před 4 lety

      @@organicgrow4440 well, this is rather unusual it seems. Because every video and website I saw says it takes at least 5 years to get fruits. I have just started so I have no experience, but I'm not expecting anything any time soon.

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 4 lety

      MrZaz3 yeah I was so shocked I didn’t expect it this early at all, I was thinking at least years 4-6 to see flowers yet alone ripe fruit by 2 years! GPH is also in the same city as me & has had the same 2 year result from seed. See here czcams.com/video/r9BxBoKe6SU/video.html - he did it in a pot, i’ve got mine in the ground.

    • @subtitledEN
      @subtitledEN Před 4 lety

      @@organicgrow4440 Thank you. I'm in Egypt- very hot and humid summers- planted mine in the soil less than 3 weeks ago and it already has a nice longish stem with beautiful leaves (it's a poly, so I have a 2nd but very small seedling). It's big, considering it's only 3 weeks or not even.
      I will lower my expectations in the hope to get pleasantly surprised, like you
      Cheers

  • @StanTheObserver-lo8rx
    @StanTheObserver-lo8rx Před 5 lety +2

    Its taken me five years to grow one to fruiting from seed. This is its first year with panicles. I see maybe 3 little tiny Mango fruits on it. It's a good looking little tree..lush dark green foliage and when it flushes-such a rich dark red. Much better looking than my Manila that's about 10' tall. The Honey is about half that height.

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 4 lety

      Stan TheObserver very nice well done, how are your mango trees now? Thanks for sharing & disproving the inexperienced people saying it will never fruit or fruits in 30 years.

    • @StanTheObserver-lo8rx
      @StanTheObserver-lo8rx Před 4 lety +1

      @@organicgrow4440 Its in full flush and hundreds of proto fruits. Most will fall off but the tree is very healthy about 5' tall and all around too. It to me looks to be a bushy very low branching small tree. Fine with that. Another Mango tree I have,
      Manila,is a little farther along- but its twice as old and over twice as large.

    • @subtitledEN
      @subtitledEN Před 4 lety

      @@StanTheObserver-lo8rx Amazing. Any tips re light, watering and fertilizing? Also what size of pot would you recommend based on your experience?
      Thanks

    • @StanTheObserver-lo8rx
      @StanTheObserver-lo8rx Před 4 lety

      @@subtitledEN Start in a gallon pot..and try to give it plenty of warm. August is a little late to start and plant out..unless you are in the tropics. Otherwise keep as warm and sunny as possible in winter. They tend to grow low branching so make great garden trees with fruit easy to reach. Mine is only about 5' tall and around but has fruit all over it right now.

    • @subtitledEN
      @subtitledEN Před 4 lety

      @@StanTheObserver-lo8rx Thanks. Well, I'm in Egypt, so not too late :-D stays pretty hot until early October here

  • @NoVaCitrusGrower
    @NoVaCitrusGrower Před 5 lety

    Ataulfo mangoes are polyembryonic. That is why the seed has multiple sections. Honestly these can just be planted straight into potting soil. But using your method, it might just be possible to separate out the small seedlings once roots and shoots are visible. I would add a fair amount of perlite to the soil, or, if you are in Cali and have access to pumice, that would be a good additive. Then don't keep the soil too wet. Heat will help them germinate. Whether or not the most vigorous seedling is a clone or a product of fertilization is unclear.

  • @silkmd
    @silkmd Před 3 lety

    Not sure what part of the country you're in, I got about 4-5 mango trees from seed put in ground about 2 1/2 feet tall frost in the winter even covered with mulch,
    I think if tree got strong roots it might survive, but I was wrong I'll try again,,,, Thanks for a really good vid. (I'm in the mid Atlantic part zone 7)

  • @yosupyang2952
    @yosupyang2952 Před 3 lety

    망고씨앗 발아가 힘든데 성공하셨네요. 축하드려요.

  • @compa8806
    @compa8806 Před 4 lety

    Will a walmart bag work

  • @Justmusic72
    @Justmusic72 Před 2 měsíci

    I really neglected mine but it's really really resilient and strong

  • @alicesmithnanna
    @alicesmithnanna Před rokem

    When a seed is in pieces like that you don't need to graft its got its mothers fruit grafted in it already.

  • @EdSuastegui
    @EdSuastegui Před 3 lety +1

    That is two seedlings growing, not one. Ataulfo is polyembrionic, with one embryo *not* like the parent, and the others being clones of the parent, and thus producing the fruit you started with (or very close to it).

  • @ewakacalinska713
    @ewakacalinska713 Před 4 lety +13

    I've got 5 plants from one seed :-)

    • @ornelassilva6778
      @ornelassilva6778 Před 3 lety +1

      What show me please do you have an ig

    • @moviesinminutes4057
      @moviesinminutes4057 Před 3 lety

      I got two plants from my one seed! I never knew trees had twins

    • @babypenguin8754
      @babypenguin8754 Před 3 lety

      @@moviesinminutes4057 Is actually quite cute.. You can by theory, set them up to "do" everything together. Like grow up together give mangoes together..

    • @GAMER-zx9pd
      @GAMER-zx9pd Před 3 lety

      no no no you all are a liar it can be from one seed only 1 mango tree come

  • @zubairsaifi5850
    @zubairsaifi5850 Před 5 lety +1

    Chaunsa mangoes are the tastiest.

  • @deadphonixblade5832
    @deadphonixblade5832 Před 6 lety +1

    Good

  • @samantha5199
    @samantha5199 Před 4 lety

    My Favorite mango💕💕💕

  • @ricksmith1574
    @ricksmith1574 Před 2 lety

    Its been 4 years now. How did they do?

  • @hongopedo
    @hongopedo Před 6 lety

    I always plant mango seeds in the ground or in a pot, and if the seed is not damaged or dead, they always germinate, maybe your ploblem is that your mangos have been too much time in the refrigerator, that usually damages the embryo and it eventually dies, even after germination. What I have observed is that if you plant the seed in the ground, the seedling grows much faster than one germinated in pot and both of them are faster than one germinated with any other method. Ah, and you remember your last pinneaple growing series? I planted two at the same time, and trew one of them when you did it, but I left the other, aaand, now is starting to sprout, after several months.

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety +1

      I actually never refrigerate my mangoes because the ones in my supermarket are always on the unripe side, and I know that these big fragile seeds can't handle drying out or freezing at all. Maybe I got a lot of bad seeds? Many of the mangoes I buy don't taste good even if I let them ripen for a few days or a week. Growing in the ground is no doubt optimal considering how deep and vast the roots of this species go right off the bat, I wish I had a yard.
      It's amazing how your pineapple crown started growing after months. Usually I give up after a month or two for germination attempts, even if I dig in there and find shoots/roots, because I want fast results for my videos.

    • @hongopedo
      @hongopedo Před 6 lety

      Melvin Wei maybe the seeds weren't mature enough, if this attemp fails, you could try again with a a mango that was ripen in the tree. Another good growing series could be a Strelitzia one (I think at this time of year they have at least the fruit, the seeds may need a month or two before be ready to harvest) or even a banana one, although you would need to buy ornamental banana seeds.

    • @StanTheObserver-lo8rx
      @StanTheObserver-lo8rx Před 5 lety

      Mangos hate peaty potting soils. In ground is better for those who have warmer soils when you plant them. Sometimes you germinate them at the wrong time of year and a pot is all you can do.

  • @normanschwartz2992
    @normanschwartz2992 Před 5 lety

    Are u sure this type of mango only grows in CA and Asia? Do u know if they grow in Fl? I swear it looks like the one I just ate..and it was amazingly delicious!

    • @pudykinztv1010
      @pudykinztv1010 Před 5 lety +1

      Norman Schwartz they’ll definitely grow in south Florida

  • @growingtolive2383
    @growingtolive2383 Před 5 lety

    Looking good! The only issue so far is that the germinated seed my have been over-potted.

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 4 lety

      Growing To Live over potted? What does that mean.

    • @growingtolive2383
      @growingtolive2383 Před 4 lety

      Organic Grow It means you selected a container size that’s too big for whatever you’re planting. Except in hindsight, mangos do have a fairly deep tap root, so it may not be an issue in Melvin’s case.

  • @trucktuber
    @trucktuber Před 4 lety +2

    sow the seeds directly in soil.. why to mess so much

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 4 lety +1

      Gurmeet Singh 100% Agreed! I was trying to think of the reason maybe he is in a really cold climate & this will give him a step ahead. Otherwise mango do so well straight in soil with hot temps & regular water. My 2 seed grown direct both fruited in 2 years. Temperate climate but extremely hot summer.

  • @cano6638
    @cano6638 Před 3 lety

    Nice

  • @noahtavares306
    @noahtavares306 Před 6 lety +2

    Next episode?

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety +1

      Unfortunately the plant died from a fungal infection just 4 days later, but I already had a large regular mango seed germination underway at the time. I'm making another video on that after maybe another month.

  • @amandah7096
    @amandah7096 Před 6 lety

    So fascinating thanks for sharing

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety

      Haven't seen you comment in a long time, thanks for watching!

    • @amandah7096
      @amandah7096 Před 6 lety +1

      Melvin Wei Apologizes have been very ill since 2017
      Glad to see you're still posting

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety

      Get well soon!

  • @HamoodiClash
    @HamoodiClash Před 4 lety

    I would like to let you know out of about 30 seeds only 4 showed roots after days and days, after two months I have two small mango trees and one of them is dying.

  • @isaacg4511
    @isaacg4511 Před 3 lety

    Hi I did this and one of my mango trees is short but it has fully developed leaves what does this mean

  • @ingarrajoey
    @ingarrajoey Před 6 lety +2

    That's going to be a strong seedling. I grow mangoes in Florida and do quite a bit of grafting. I have issues germinating seedlings to use for that purpose. I may try your technique in the near future. Thank you for sharing 👍

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety +1

      Thanks for watching! I think it'll be a strong seedling too, based on how vast and healthy the root system already looks at day 12. How are you normally germinating seedlings?

    • @ingarrajoey
      @ingarrajoey Před 6 lety

      Melvin Wei I usually start them in a compost and sand mix.

    • @Aritul
      @Aritul Před 6 lety

      My Tropical Obsession That's a good idea.

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 4 lety

      My Tropical Obsession I suggest experiment with the Mother Nature method. Right in soil in hot summer with regular watering.

  • @jmpdguerra936
    @jmpdguerra936 Před 5 lety +1

    Can you do the same thing with a avocado seed?

    • @organicgrow4440
      @organicgrow4440 Před 4 lety

      jmpd guerra yes you can, an easier way is straight in the soil for avocado/mango in hot summer with water twice a day.

  • @jannishilpajrgensen8315

    I am trying same method today. But i only use tap water. We have heat in the floor, so i placed it in a cabin. I am from Denmark. Excited to see what Will happen 🤔❤️❤️🤞🏼🤞🏼🤞🏼

  • @violetblandon287
    @violetblandon287 Před 4 lety

    I put my seeds in the soil after only 4 days of germination, can I take them out and put them in the plastic bag again ...it's been only a few hours. Pls reply asap? Thanks!

  • @awashiplays100
    @awashiplays100 Před 3 lety

    Should I put it in sunlight

  • @TheGamerAffiliate
    @TheGamerAffiliate Před 6 lety

    Hey Melvin saw your video about Habanero pepper. I was wondering if you could tell me how long would it take me to produce a harvest of Chocolate Habaneros? I live in East Coast and they will be plant outdoors. The seeds will be here next week.
    Thank you

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety

      Hi, I cut that series off before I got fruit but I currently have a sweet banana pepper series going on...it's almost 80 days and I have flower buds that bees are checking out everyday, but I got off to a very slow start. The seed packet said 72 days until harvest which didn't seem likely from the start. If you're starting at the end of July it might be too late for your chocolate habanero plants to get ripe peppers before fall, it already gets really cold in October on the East Coast (depending on your latitude, you'd have to be close to Florida to stand a chance). 4 months seems like a good estimate for peppers assuming nothing goes wrong with your plants.

    • @TheGamerAffiliate
      @TheGamerAffiliate Před 6 lety

      Melvin Wei oh wow! was expecting a lot less. thank you.
      You don't have any kind of habanero you would be willing to sell me do you?
      everything I get at the store is just trash. not spicy at all.

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety

      I don't have anything to give you, unfortunately. So you're a big fan of spice? What do you think about Thai peppers? I never encounter anything more spicy than Thai peppers, just a small amount added to their soups gets my nose running like a faucet, even though it's really good. All the Korean, Indian, and Mexican spices I encounter in restaurants are pretty mild in comparison.

    • @TheGamerAffiliate
      @TheGamerAffiliate Před 6 lety

      Melvin Wei not a fan of super brutal spicy. but I love habanero flavor. love it. habanero spicy is as spicy as I'll go. lol

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety

      On the web it says that habaneros are 3x as spicy as Thai peppers, and that jalapenos are really mild compared to both of those, but I've also had fresh jalapenos that were pretty spicy. I guess it depends on how well they were grown, sometimes peppers are stale and weak, maybe if your local habanero peppers are weak you might have luck with other peppers in other stores.

  • @Timurv1234
    @Timurv1234 Před 4 lety +1

    I was sprouting my mango seed in some wet paper towels and it sprouted nicely and the stem was coming up when I noticed that there was just a little smidgeon of mold on the end of the root. The very tip of the root was black but the stem continued growing. Is my plant-to-be dead or is there a chance it could throw some lateral roots out of the remaining part of the root and keep growing?

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 4 lety +1

      I think it could recover via lateral roots. You might consider germinating more seeds as backups if the root tip looks rotten. Paper towels are bad because they mold over quickly.

    • @Timurv1234
      @Timurv1234 Před 4 lety

      @@TheMelvinWei Thanks for the response! I quickly wiped the mold off, carefully, and transferred it to a bowl of water, suspending it above it with toothpicks. I'm gonna leave it and see if it recovers, but the good thing is I have another seed that seems to be doing better. I'm planning on planting it in soil soon as the first leaves are already cca half an inch long.

  • @OokamiSolstice92
    @OokamiSolstice92 Před 4 lety

    Does your water mixture contain hydrogen peroxide or is it just distilled water?

  • @marinettegiry6317
    @marinettegiry6317 Před 3 lety

    Bjr que métier vous comme feuilles avant de la planté Merci

  • @nathansmith8889
    @nathansmith8889 Před 3 lety

    Should avoid burrying the whole seed because it can lead to rot. But awesome bottle technique!

  • @lizoriginale
    @lizoriginale Před 5 lety +1

    I have those dishes

  • @meen4796
    @meen4796 Před 4 lety

    in Pakistan we have a mango called chaunsa and it is the sweetest fruit ever! here where I live they call them honey mangoes imported from Pakistan and India so I was so confused when u said honey mangos from Mexico? but I soon learned they are a completely different species of fruit lol

  • @nowthatsjustducky
    @nowthatsjustducky Před 2 lety

    Seems like a zipper baggie, sprayed inside with water and the seed sealed inside with no paper towel, and kept in the dark on top of the fridge should do the job just as efficiently, using far less space.
    Day 0: That is how I am trying my first one.

  • @trevormcsketti7267
    @trevormcsketti7267 Před 3 lety

    Are there enough ads, do you think?

  • @courtneystuart9265
    @courtneystuart9265 Před 6 lety +1

    I ate a honey mango about two weeks ago. Then I opened the seed case, and the seed ALREADY HAD a long pink root! There were also little browner parts coming off of the main root. Is that normal? For the root to get that developed Inside of the mango?

    • @courtneystuart9265
      @courtneystuart9265 Před 6 lety

      Then I planted it

    • @TheMelvinWei
      @TheMelvinWei  Před 6 lety

      Wow that's really rare, I've opened maybe a hundred mango seed coats and never saw that. Yours will probably sprout much quicker than the usually 12 or 13 days.

    • @subtitledEN
      @subtitledEN Před 4 lety

      Not very unusual it seems- I saw a video where the guy had a sprouting seed inside.
      How is it going?