I actually have an avo tree taller than me that I started this way 10 or so years ago. It is in a pot, and our climate is a bit cold for them, so I move it into the house in winter.
These are normally outside, just hiding from the worst of the winter.
Should work, but your tree needs water.
I tend to underwater, IME I’ve lost more plants from overwatering than underwatering.
It’s definitely something that happens to people often, but in your case you can clearly see the leaves hanging towards the floor. While indoors, I tend to water my Avocados when I notice the leaves starting to hang.
Of course, check the soil first. If you poke your finger in a couple centimeters and you can feel moisture, you can still wait a bit.
Could it just be a bit cold?
Unless OPs living space is constantly below ~15°C, it shouldn’t be an issue.
Oh i was just thinking like how rhododendrons droop their leaves in the winter,. If the avos could be doing a similar thing. But good to know!
Avocados originate from Mesoamerica where Winters are mild. They have no dormant period.
I had better results when I peeled the brown outer shell. It’s also very hit and miss (2 started growing out of like 5-6)
Best results I’ve had are peeling only the lower part that is touching the water.
Winter ? Do you live upside down ?
Indeed. Summer is in the air.
Note for those interested in trying this as well:
Avocados do not breed true - you will not get a tree producing the same quality of fruit that you planted. It will be some completely random type of avocado and it’s extremely rare that these end up anything besides inedible.
If you’re looking for a pretty tree: go for it.
The only reason I know what your talking about is because I was just watching a thing on apples about this subject.
It’s true of most fruit trees as I understand it.
And a bunch of veggies too. Peppers are notorious for cross breeding.
Cross breeding yes - but you usually have edible peppers from the crosses.
Crabapples are what you get when you plant apple seeds. Nearly inedible when compared to the fruit it came from.
Peppers are fruits! In botanical terms anyway.
Vegetable is a culinary term not a botanical one.
This info gets repeated quite often, but when you talk to people who have gotten fruit from seed-grown avocado trees they usually say that the fruit is good.
See this video and its comment section: https://youtu.be/anUdo8tZlh0
Huh: I guess I was wrong.
At the same time the avocado he opened there had barely any flesh. It was mostly seed.
I’m not convinced that it’s worth the effort of 6+ years of growing the tree to have fruit that is inferior to a seedling you could get for $20.
You can graft branches from good producers onto your plant.
Not sure where to source the grafts thoughGenerally you just buy a tree pre-grafted. They’re usually grafting onto heartier root stock to begin with.
That tree definitely needs water! Their leaves aren’t supposed to be limp. You should be able to easily tell if it needs water by feeling the weight of the pot.