GARDENING: DON’T CRITICISE YOUR MANGO TREE
Q. There is a huge mango tree in our Karachi garden. It is about 35 years old and gives 400-500 mangoes each year, but the problem is that it could give twice this amount as about half of the fruit falls off in the initial stages of growth. We feed the tree with manure purchased from a nursery. The tree is home to many birds so we don’t want to cut it down. Where are we going wrong?
A. The only wrong thing you are doing is failing to understand that your wonderful mango tree is doing incredibly well and that, irrespective of how good growing conditions are, a tree is only capable of bearing a certain number of fruit all the way through to maturity. The tree knows exactly how many fruit it can ripen so, quite sensibly, sheds any excess well before they drain its strength, thus allowing it to carry on and ripen the 400-500 mangoes it gifts to you each season. Please don’t criticise your tree, go out and thank it instead.
Q. We have a 25-ft tall mango tree grown from a ‘ghutli’ planted 10 years ago. It gets very little sunshine because there is a building in the way. The tree gets a lot of flowers but they all fall off. What can we do to make the flowers stay and turn into fruit? We reside in Clifton.
Answers to your gardening queries
A. There are a number of possible reasons for the flowers dropping: a) lack of sunshine; b) incorrect irrigation at flowering time; c) incorrect soil conditions; d) a lack of pollination/cross pollination; e) a combination of all of the aforementioned factors or f) the tree is infertile. Soil improvement may help, as may irrigation from when the tree is coming into flower until after they harvest — if fruit sets the next season.
If the tree is male, planting a female tree close by may eventually result in the tree fruiting and vice versa although if it is completely sterile nothing will ever make it bear fruit. Having made these points, it must also be stressed that plenty of sunshine is necessary for the health of a fruit tree and this, unfortunately, is something you cannot do anything lawful about!
Q. I love plants and herbs but live in a penthouse in Karachi and doubt if I can grow anything here.