Tropical Horticulture Project
Mangos and avocados are both easy to grow. Mangos sprout sooner, but require more
light and better soil. Avocados grow really quickly once they sprout. The trick with either one is
to germinate the seed before you plant it in the dirt. Seeds require humidity, water, light, and
warmth, and you can get that by filling the bottom of a sealable container with water, wrapping the
seed in a damp paper towel, and sealing the seed in the container. Every few days you should open
the container to let the air exchange. When the seed germinates, plant the seed in
loamy soil with
good drainage, orienting the root down. A mango will take up to a month to germinate. An avocado
may take several months.
This same basic technique of germinating seeds works for “easy” seeds, too, like peas
and beans.
When germinating a mango, be sure to take the husk off the seed first.
Parts of an avocado’s brown seed coat will flake off naturally as it germinates.
It’s hard to tell if a seed is good without waiting a few weeks. A safe
bet is to buy ripe fruit
from a gourmet grocery store in a warm climate. On the other hand, buying avocados in December from
Rainbow Foods in Minneapolis might give you a few duds. The fruit probably was picked unripe to
facilitate shipping, and the fruit might have been damaged by frost in transit.
If you open up an avocado and you see small root-like fibers going to
the seed, it doesn’t mean
the seed already sprouted! The avocado root is shaped like perciatelli pasta and the seed
will split before it comes out. You will know it when you see it. In this picture, the
reason you
don’t see root hairs is that the root has very recently sprouted. One trick to see if
a germinated avocado is still viable to rotate the seed so that the tip is not
pointing down. Over the next day, the root will grow a visible amount, straight down,
making a bend at the end of the root. You can see several bends at the end of this
avocado’s root. As a side note, you should get the avocados in the soil as soon as
they germinate. You should not let the root grow as long as I did in this
illustration.