Variety Photos Greece Crete. The name “Avocado” comes from the nouns ahuacacuauhitl which means testicle tree!
Avocado is a dense, evergreen tree, which throws many leaves early in the spring. They are rapidly growing, and generally twigs to form a broad tree. Some varieties are columnar, others selected for almost uniform form. Growth shows frequent hot flashes during warm weather in the southern regions with only a long drop per year in cooler areas.
Grafted plants usually produce fruit within one to two years compared to 8 to 20 years for seedlings.
Avocado flowers are crossed, which means that the development of independent genetic lines is difficult. In fact, in flowers, the cross-right is promoted by the stigma of a flower that is receptive to the pollen before the pollen is released from the same flower. Avocado trees produce thousands of flowers and only one in 5,000 sets fruit. Considering it comes from South American forests, Avocado is admirable in its ability to thrive in a wide range of environmental conditions. It needs water and frost and prefers ungrounded, non-sensitive soils, sun and dry air.
The flesh of avocado is deep green near the skin, becomes yellowish closer to the single large, inedible oval seed. The flesh is tough when harvested but soft in a buttery texture. Friction caused by the wind can cause scarring on the skin, creating cracks that extend into the flesh. “Cukes” are seedless, round fruits. Out-of-season fruit should not be harvested with the main crop, but left in the tree to mature. The seeds can germinate in an avocado when it is over-mature, causing internal molds and damage.
High in monosaccharides, the avocado oil content is second only to the olives between the fruits, and sometimes higher. Clinical dietary studies in humans have shown that avocado oil can lower cholesterol in the blood. Avocado fruits are an important food in South America and are nutritious with high levels of mainly unsaturated oils, minerals, vitamins and reasonable levels of protein. The oil is obviously similar in composition to olive oil.
W –Western Indian type avocados produce huge, smooth round, glossy green fruits that are low in oil and weigh up to 2 pounds. This is summer or fall-maturing. They have skin, flexible, non-granular skin. The leaves are not fragrant. They are grown in Florida, West Indies, the Bahamas, Bermuda and the tropics of the Old World. They are not grown in California.
G – Guatemalan types produce medium oval or pear, pearly green fruits that turn black-green when mature. Guatemalan avocados are mainly winter and spring ripening. The skin varies from thin to very thick and is granular or granular. The flesh is rich in taste and relatively high in oil. Cultivated in Florida and California.
M – Mexican varieties – the fruits are small (6 – 10 ounces) with fine-grained paper that becomes glossy green or black when ripe. The tender skin adheres to the flesh.The flesh has a high oil content of up to 30%. The leaves have a strong odor resembling anise and favored for cooking. The tree is more resistant to cooling.
Varieties of avocado available from Top Tropicals
Picture
Name of the variety
Deletion period
Plant size
Production
Fruit shape / size
fruit color
Coldtolerance
Comments
Type
Place of origin
Brazos Belle
October November
middle-long, big
purple-black
Very cold hard
Produces medium-sized, purple-black long fruit. Period: October-November. It can get temperatures up to 15F for a short time without any significant damage.
Μ
Texas
Brogdon
end of summer-fall
small to medium tree, moderate rigidity
low productivity
pear 7 to 15 oz
red-purple
too high
Brogdon has red-purple fruit. Weight 7 to 15 oz. The skin is very thin. Yellow Butter Flesh. It is an excellent choice for guacamole lovers. Fruits mature at the end of summer-fall. Very cold hard. Good for Central Florida. They come from the winter, in Florida, by Tom Brogdon.
Μ
Florida
Choquette
January-March
medium-sized tree
bear in alternate years
oval, very big 30-40 Oz
dark green, slightly skinny
low
Choquette is a fantastic Florida avocado that produces very large fruits. 30-40 Oz fruit. The skin is glossy, soft, dark green, slightly cutaneous. Flesh thick, yellow, very good quality. Oil content 13%. The seed medium, tight. Resistant to common avocado diseases. Recommended for home plantations in Florida. This avocado is where quality is intertwined with quantity, and quickly becomes one of the favorites in Florida’s winter residents.
GxW
Florida
Day
July to September
thin tree
in the shape of a club
Green, soft skin
high
The avocado day is green, smooth and flower-shaped. The fruit is of very good quality and has a nice buttery consistency. The thin tree is very cold tolerant and produces in July to September.
Fantastic
green, thin skin
Very cold hard
A very large cold variety, supposedly the coldest hard of all avocados. It produces green, thin skin. The fruit has a creamy texture. It can get temperatures up to 15F for a short time without any significant damage.
Μ
Texas
Fuerte
November to June
Difficult spreading tree
surely it is a routine year
pear, small to medium, elongated, 8-16 Oz
Green, Skin slightly rough
too high
Avocado Fuerte, very cold variety hard.Green fruits, elongated, 8-16 Oz. The skin is slightly rough, thin, non-attached to the flesh. Green flesh near the skin, oil content 12-17%. Excellent taste, buttery. Medium to large seed. Difficult wood scattering with definitely alternate habit. It opens in November until June. Often used for avocado cocktails. The natural hybrid comes from Mexico’s Atlixco.
GxM
Mexico
Golden
round Medium size
yellow
too high
The local Florida variety emerged from Wauchula, which is cold, compared to South Florida. This variety survived in winter 2009 in Wauchula when the temperature dropped to low 20sF, without any significant damage. Very unusual middle fruit size – round yellow and smooth skin. creamy yellow flesh.
G
Florida
Hall
November December
medium size
alternative but heavy carrier
pear-shaped
light green
too high
Large, tasty pear fruit. Skin bright green, attractive, smooth, thick enough. Flesh deep yellow, oil content 12-16%, medium seed, tight. Excellent for the limited purchase of fancy fruits. An alternating but heavyweight player. The tree has excellent cold tolerance. He comes to Miami, FL by Willis Hall.
GxW
Florida
Hass
Summer
medium size
Heavy duty bearings The second year starts
Pear-sheep in the oval
black
Average
Hass Avocado is dark in color with a rough and uneven skin. It will become black when mature. Average size, 10 oz. Flesh creamy, excellent aroma, no fiber, 18-25% oil content. It is known for the rich taste of walnut and the high oil content. Skin skin, rough, dark purple to black when ripe, thick. Seeds small, tight in a cavity.Maintaining the properties excellent, good sender. Heavy duty bearings. The second year starts. Top commercial variety in California. This is the most popular commercially cultivated variety. Trees have a wide variety and can be grown in the southern regions of Texas, Louisiana and Florida.
Μ
California
.
Joey
September October
medium-sized, egg-shaped
purple-black
Very cold hard
Selected by Joey Ricers in Uvalde, Texas. It produces medium-sized purple-egg-shaped fruit. It has an excellent taste.Heavy player. Period: September-October. It can get temperatures up to 15F for a short time without any significant damage.
Μ
Texas
Lila
September October
medium size
green
Very cold hard
It produces medium-sized, green fruits.Period: September-October. Do not confuse this variety with Lula, which is popular in Florida and used for subjects (one is cold resistant to only 25F). It can get temperatures up to 15F for a short time without any significant damage.
Μ
Texas
Lula
November December
The tree is tall, lively, upright
bear early and heavy
pear tree, sometimes with neck, medium size
green
too high
Fruit in the shape of a pear, sometimes with a neck, medium size. The skin is almost smooth. Flesh open to green-yellow. Oil content 12-16%. Seeds large, tight. Medium-delay period (November-December). The tree is tall, bear early and heavy. Cold-resistant, successful in Central and South Florida where the former is the dominant commercial variety. More frost-resistant than most. It is known for its ability to endure harsh winters and for the extremely long harvest period. This makes Lula an excellent choice for homeowners in and around Orlando. It comes from seeds from a parent tree planted in 1915 by Mrs Lula Cellon in Miami, Florida
GxM
Florida
Mexicola
August to October
Bring early and regularly
spherical to pyrimorphic, very small 3-5 Oz
black, smooth
too high
Very small fruit 3-5 Oz. Skin black, thin, smooth. Excellent taste. Seeds large. Very resistant to heat and cooling. It is the coldest variety of hardness, it can withstand temperatures at low 20s. She is very much used as a parent in California’s playlists. It comes from the Pasadena of California.
Μ
California
Mexicola Grande
August to October
Bring early and regularly
spherical to pyrimorphic, very small 3-5 Oz
black, smooth
very cold hardy
This variety is similar to Mexicola but much larger fruit. He survived temperatures around 10F near San Antonio, Texas (Zone 8b). It can get temperatures up to 15F for a short time without any significant damage.
Μ
Texas
Nishikawa
December-January
Violent and upright
Oval large
Average
The Nishikawa Avocado variety comes from Hawaii. It is a mixture of Guatemala and Mexican avocado. Average cold hardness. Ripen in December-January (in Florida), type B. The oval fruit is somewhat like Hass variety of avocado but larger. It has a very high oil content. Strong and upright growing tree.
GxM
Hawaii
Pollock
From July to August
very lively tree
Shy
Long to pear, very large, up to 5 pounds
Green, smooth, glossy
low
Long as fruit in the shape of a pear. very wide, up to 5 pounds. Green leather, smooth, glossy. The flesh is tight, smooth and smooth in texture. Deep yellow that changes to yellowish green near the skin.It contains 3-5% oil. Seeds large, often loose in the cavity. Early season, July-August. Shy, very big fruit but of excellent quality. emerged in Miami in the ownership of HS Pollock.
W
Florida
Cape
medium to large
green
very cold hardy
Avocado Ponce. Very large cold variety. It produces medium to large green fruits.He survived temperatures around 10F near San Antonio, Texas (Zone 8b). It can get temperatures up to 15F for a short time without any significant damage.
Μ
Texas
Russell
August September
Light production
pear shape with long neck, very long fruit
green
low
Russel is easily recognized by the shape of the gourd. The fruit and therefore the tree is very popular in Latin communities in South Florida. The production of light discourages commercial growers, but remains an excellent choice for the enthusiast. Big fruits, 24-36 Oz. Long fruit up to 13 inches. The skin is green, smooth, glossy, thin, leather. Yellow flesh, excellent quality. Small shoots, cavity low in the wide end of the fruit, often a solid neck of the flesh 5-6 inches long.
W
Florida
Simmonds
July-September
mean firmness
Regular player, but sometimes throws a lot of fruit
Elongated-oval to pyrimorphic, large
light green, smooth skin
low
Simmonds Avocado is the most popular avocado of the first season in South Florida. Fruit large, oblong-oval to pyrimorph. Skin smooth, light green. Flesh with good taste, oil content 3-6%. Seeds of medium size, usually tight. Good production, excellent trade acceptance and excellent food quality make it an excellent choice for the garden or the olive grove.
W
Florida
Winter Mexican
December-January
intense tree
bear heavy and regular
Long to pyramidal
dark green, skin
too high
Fruit 12-18 oz., Skin thick, cutaneous, dark green. Seed medium, tight in the cavity.The winter Mexican variety is one of the coldest varieties of resistant. Ripe trees can withstand temperatures in the mid-20s. Long fruits, 12 to 18 oz, thick green skin, medium seed. Very intense tree, bear briskly and regularly. It comes from Palm Beach, Florida
GxM
Palm Beach, Florida
Wurtz(Little Cado)
May to September
Dwarf, compact and slow growth 10-15 feet
Production is good and is a steady bearer. It tolerates moderately but regularly.
pear shape, small to medium
green
high
Nafi hybrid. Fruit 8-12 oz. Skin of medium thickness. Good quality, 18% oil content. It is very compact and slow, reaching only 8-12 feet in maturity. Distinctive habit of developing itching. Suitable for growers, containers, patios, greenhouse use. Ideal for growing the dirt road or the pot. The tree can handle temperatures up to 25 (F) degrees. The seed is small and the fruit skin is smooth. Fruit matures green from May to September. The taste is very good.Production is good and is a consistent player. Bears moderate but regularly. It comes from Encinitas (California) by Roy Wurtz.
G
California
Yamagata
very early on March-July
bright and upright, dark green foliage
large, oval-pyrimorphic with a curved neck
green
Medium to low
The Yamagata variety is too early. He matures in Florida in March-April when no other variety produces fruit. It can mature over a long period, from March to July. The fruits are large, with small seed and green skin. Flesh green, smooth, nut flavor. It is a very nice, gourmet avocado of Hawaii, named for the agricultural expert Heiji Yamagata, who developed it. According to the Hawaiian University poll, Yamagata was chosen as one of Hawaii’s best varieties. Medium to low cold hardness.Very tall and upright growing tree.
W
Hawaii
Poncho
large
green
Very cold hard
It produces medium to large green fruits.Cold hard to 15F. It can get temperatures up to 15F for a short time without any significant damage.
Variety Photos Greece Crete. Avocado with cold lipstick is of Mexican origin. She is self-confident. They have thin, tender skin that adheres to the flesh. The flesh has a high oil content of up to 30%.Some varieties have leaves with a strong odor resembling anise. These avocados are known to be grown around San Antonio, Texas (Zone 8b). The avocado planted there was damaged, but it was not killed in 10F. As a general rule, these varieties can tolerate temperatures up to 15F for a short time without significant damage.
Important things to keep in mind:
Small plants are very tender and sensitive to cold. When the freezer is expected, pivot the casing around the trunk for extra protection. Cover the tree with a blanket. During severe freezes, add a series of lights or a small heater under the covers. Mature trees are more resistant to cooling and do not need this extra protection.
Cold tolerance depends on many factors. The location of the facilities and the protection from the wind are very important. Install a tree, so it will be protected from cold wind, which is much more dangerous than the cold itself. Avocado plants in the warmest location in the residential landscape, usually on the south or southeast side of the house.
Healthy, well-groomed, plants are more tolerant.
Very important: Moisture plays an important role. In general, plants grown in areas with dry winter of low humidity are colder tolerant than plants grown in the wet winter region. For example, a plant can withstand 10-15F in dry Texas climate, but can tolerate only 15-20F in a humid climate on the East Coast. Avocados need very little water during the cooling. It is very sensitive to excessive watering. There is no quicker way to kill the plant than excessive water during the cold season.Good drainage is the most important factor to consider when planting an avocado tree. In areas with poor drainage, create a soil embankment and plant the tree on the embankment.
Cold varieties:
Brazos Belle: Produces medium-sized, purple-black long fruit. Period: October-November.
Fantastic: Produces green, thin paper skin, supposedly the coolest hard of all. The fruit has a creamy texture.
Joey: Selected by Joey Ricers in Uvalde, Texas (just outside San Antonio). It produces medium-sized purple-egg-shaped fruit. It has an excellent taste. Heavy player.Period: September-October.
Lila : Produces medium-sized, green fruit. Period: September-October. Do not confuse this variety with Lula, which is a popular Florida variety and is commonly used for the subject. (Lula is cold resistant up to 25F)
Poncho : Produces medium to large green fruits. Cold hard to 15F