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-   -   Litchi Tomato (Morelle de Balbis, Solanum sisymbriifolium) (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=21478)

Durgan April 10, 2014 04:46 PM

[QUOTE=KarenO;398327]Grew it last year and found it disappointing just like the person I got the seed from... Thorny and weird. Found the fruit dry, seedy and inedible reminded me of a Rose hip more than anything else. Interesting novelty but I won't grow it again. Fiercely sharply thorny.
KarenO[/QUOTE]

Same as my experience. I even gave a couple plants to a friend who dropped me. It is a terrible plant all around. No virtues at all.

Tracydr April 10, 2014 05:10 PM

I think if I want an ornamental spiny plant, I'll stick with cardoons. I know they can also be invasive but at least they're good to eat from what I've heard.

pershing June 20, 2014 04:46 PM

Anyone harvesting Litchis yet? Mine has plenty of fruit but are taking forever. Do they fall? How to pick them? Thanks...

Iva June 21, 2014 01:37 AM

The fruits do not fall, but the husks open and 'curl' back somewhat for easier picking.
I do recommend using gloves while picking single fruits as the thorns are quite nasty.
Or you can use scissors and cut off entire fruit branches when most of the fruits on them are ripe. It is easier to pick out single fruits off when away from the very prickly plant...

pershing June 28, 2014 11:00 PM

Just tried our first Litchi's and after the extra work around the thorns its just not worth it. So many more varieties worth the time and effort.

P

greentiger87 July 2, 2014 02:08 PM

Weird how much the opinions vary on this one. Maybe its different cultivars?

Redbaron July 2, 2014 03:17 PM

[QUOTE=greentiger87;421129]Weird how much the opinions vary on this one. Maybe its different cultivars?[/QUOTE] I don't know of any Litchi cultivars.:?!?: Certainly the Litchi I am growing for the first time this year is a wicked very thorny evil beast. Pretty though. Quite decorative. Love the large foliage and beautiful flowers.

No ripe fruit yet............ So I am withholding my opinion for now.

kayrobbins July 2, 2014 04:55 PM

I have a love/hate feeling about this plant. Every year I promise myself I am not going to grow it again because I really do not like the taste at all. But the blooms are pretty and it attracts pollinators. And since I have been saving seeds I guess I am not done with it yet.

pershing July 2, 2014 05:22 PM

It does flower a lot and had about 30 fruit in process. But between getting tangled in its thorns and sub-standard taste I will try something else...

Iva July 3, 2014 06:08 AM

With Litchi Tomato, taste varies from season to season for sure.
Sometimes it tastes EXACTLY like cherries and sometimes it is simply blah.

I noticed it tastes better when it gets enough water throughout the growing season as that makes the fruits juicier. With more juice comes more taste. In dry years it is just a bunch of seeds inside a red skin and no taste whatsoever...
So irrigation might help with taste...

pershing July 3, 2014 08:05 AM

I had drip irrigation. None of the other plants complained. Tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers and melons all did/doing fine. Unless they need even more than the rest; I dont see a reason.


P

Wil SC July 12, 2014 12:16 PM

Mine are in full bloom (thanks Zeedman for the seeds). I had one plant grow much faster then the rest and put on flowers 4-5 weeks earlier. The majority of the flowers fell off since there wasn't a pollination buddy, but strangley it did set 3 fruit. I'll be saving seeds from them with the hope of getting self pollinating offspring. Now that I have 10+ plants blooming they seem to be polinating easily.

I had some leftover soil from my raspberry pots so I have some growing in normal soil and some in acidic soil. They seem to be growing at the same rate, I was curious if it would affect growth and flavor.

Bumblebees love these things, I'd probally grow a couple just for the flowers even if the fruit wasn't edible.

[IMG]http://i58.tinypic.com/t9hcg4.jpg[/IMG]

loudog March 16, 2015 01:22 AM

I grew it this past year 2014 for the first time and the taste was very good, yes the spines can be difficult, I used my tongs for the grill and a scissors to remove the fruit . Made a pie today and used a cup of blue berries with 3 cups litchi, very tasty! Louie

AlittleSalt March 16, 2015 09:37 AM

Louie, that sounds really good. I've got 5 litchi plants wanting to go in ground. I wish I knew if another freeze is coming or not.

Redbaron March 16, 2015 12:05 PM

[QUOTE=AlittleSalt;457441]Louie, that sounds really good. I've got 5 litchi plants wanting to go in ground. I wish I knew if another freeze is coming or not.[/QUOTE]All I can say is last year mine were a huge disappointment. I don't know if it is a climate thing between Ohio and the SW here. But North Texas and Central Oklahoma are probably closer in climate and soil than either of us to Ohio. So I wouldn't automatically get your hopes up. I'll keep trying and you should too. But at least last year, mine were pretty and thorny, but had not a single usable fruit.:evil:


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