Avocados Grow in New Zealand

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Avocados Grow in New Zealand

Their Farm is where The Avocados Grow

On the first of November our son will travel back to New Zealand the land of his birth, to their Avocado Farm at the top of the North Island. His Father-in-Law has had his Avocado Farm there for some 20 years and when the site or the farm next door became available, as the Owner had died, he suggested that his three daughters and their husbands should combine all their assets and buy this Avocado Farm. There was no dispute and the Deed was sealed.
All six of them traveled to the top of the North Island in New Zealand. Establishing an Avocado Farm was not easy and for five years it would be blood and sweat for all the men involved. New trees would have to be planted every year, over the next three years. For one month every year all the guys would have to give away their occupations or in the case of our son, leave his Business in the capable hands of his Partner, for that month each year..
That first year the three guys toiled diligently. They planted 800 trees on the farm next to Their Father-in- Law's Avocado Farm. He has a farm of some 1,500 trees. As his skill is highly rated by all the locals his Avocados are rated the highest in the area. Again in 2007, these three men went back and planted a further 700 trees. In November the trek will start again the men will be going back to fill the last bit of ground up with perhaps another 200 trees. This will be the maximum that they can plant on that ground. Alan believes the Farm next to them will be up for sale by then and he thinks he will get first call on the new property. Father and daughters and their spouses will buy jointly. This is back breaking work for one month every year and there is no return for five years after the planting of the first lot of trees.
Avocados
Whangarei sends most of the fruit south to Auckland and beyond with a high proportion exported. Approximately 2,600 tonnes are shifted between October and January.
The Far North fruit shifts another 2,500 tonnes between October and January.
Avocados are shipped via refrigerated containers in 20T truck and trailer loads, this amounts to an average 3 or 4 truck and trailers per day and are exported via Auckland.

If there was only one food available to me, it would be an avocado. The rich, buttery-smooth flesh of an avocado is on a lot of people's lists as a delicious but fattening treat. It's true that avocados have a high oil content, but they are also packed with vitamins A, C, and E -- primary vitamins in the antioxidant group that protect the cells in human tissue. A high protein content makes avocados a good meat substitute, and unlike animal fat, the fat is not saturated. The big surprise in avocados is how high they are in dietary fiber--they have one of the highest fiber contents of any fruit or vegetable.

There is good cholesterol and bad and Avocado is of the highest of the best.

You might well ask what an Avocado is.
Webster's New World Dictionary defines it
An Avocado is a wide spread, thick skinned pear-shaped tropical fruit, yellowish green to purplish black, with a single large seed and yellow buttery flesh and when new off the tree is very hard. Not able to be eaten at that stage.

From Wikipedia
An average avocado tree produces about 120 avocados annually. Commercial orchards produce an average of 7 tonnes per hectare each year, with some orchards achieving 20 tonnes per hectare. Biennial bearing can be a problem, with heavy crops in one year being followed by poor yields the next. The fruit is sometimes called an avocado pear or alligator pear, due to its shape and rough green skin. The avocado tree does not tolerate freezing temperatures, and can be grown only in subtropical or tropical climates.
It's true that avocados are high in fat -- one reason they've earned the nickname "butter pear." A medium-sized avocado contains 30 grams of fat, as much as a quarter-pound burger. That's why diet experts have long urged Americans to go easy on avocados in favour of less fatty fruits and vegetables. But now Nutritionists are taking another look. They're finding that most of the fat in an avocado is monounsaturated -- the "good" kind that actually lowers cholesterol levels. Thanks to this new understanding, the U.S. Government recently revised its official nutrition guidelines to urge Americans to eat more avocados.
High in the Good Fat


Persea Americana is the name of the laurel tree that Avocados grow on. Strangely enough the next definition in the Dictionary is Avocation: - Something one does in addition to ones vocation or usual form of work. This would explain their activity for this five year period.

Stanley Shepard, from Carpentaria, California made these observations during trips to Australia and New Zealand in the sixties.
Horace Greeley said, "Go west, young man," and was entirely correct for his time, but today one would say to a prospective young avocado grower, "Go South to Australia or New Zealand."
Statistics bear this comment out: Australia, with 21 million people, has
about 700 avocado acres and the United States, with 220 million people, has some
35,000 acres, giving Australia with approximately 5% of the United States population, with less than 2% of avocado acreage. Avocados are very popular in Australia and sell for much higher prices than in the United States, so there is room for considerable expansion.

When ripe, an avocado has pale yellow to gold flesh and a delicate, sweet, nutty flavor. Above the equator the fruit blooms between February and May, but it is harvested year round. Unlike most fruits, an avocado doesn't have to be picked at a certain peak time; it can remain on the tree quite a while. Like pears, avocados ripen only after they are picked, should not be eaten until the fruit is soft and squeezable. The firm fruits ship well. Once a relatively expensive delicacy, avocados have steadily decreased in price as the fruit has become more widely available, and now they're not only reasonable in price but exquisite to eat.

Mr. Len Gray, who has huge commercial planting in New Zealand, located near Gisborne in the North Island. Mr. Gray has been raising Avocados for many years and is quite successful with Hass, Anaheim, Fuerte, etc. His ranch is located on level deep soil and he is fortunate in having sufficient rainfall so that irrigation is not necessary. He has and is rapidly replacing it with avocados as they are more profitable than lemons or oranges and grow very well.
The Gisborne area is unique, being warm enough for subtropical and yet is a heavy
producer of grapes and most all deciduous fruits and vegetables. It also has fine ocean fishing and hunting, making it a desirable place to live. We have been there many times.
Avocados are being raised in small quantities in other parts of New Zealand but the
supply is very limited and as no importation is allowed, opportunities in this field should be excellent.

Avocados grow abundantly in warm climates. Europeans discovered them when Cortez arrived on these shores in the sixteenth century, but avocados had been eaten for centuries by Native Americans. Excavators have unearthed avocado pits in Peru that date to before AD 900.

Everyone believes that Mexican and Southwestern cuisines include a lot of avocados, but the fruit--especially the Haas variety--has become extremely popular in the Far East. The French also love avocados, consuming an average of five pounds a year per person, while the average American consumes two pounds. -- that is, outside the State of California, where the average consumption is six pounds a year. In the U.S. the biggest consumption of avocados nationwide is on Superbowl Sunday.
An average avocado tree produces about 120 avocados annually. Commercial orchards produce an average of 7 tonnes per hectare each year, with some orchards achieving 20 tonnes per hectare.[3] Biennial bearing can be a problem, with heavy crops in one year being followed by poor yields the next. The fruit is sometimes called an avocado pear or alligator pear, due to its shape and rough green skin. The avocado tree does not tolerate freezing temperatures, and can be grown only in subtropical or tropical climates.
Now that nutritionists are taking another look. They're finding that most of the fat in an avocado is monounsaturated -- the "good" kind that actually lowers cholesterol levels.
High in the Good Fat

The Early History of the Conquistadores with Avocados

Avocados have an Entrenched Reputation for Inducing Sexual prowess

It is evident from miscellaneous reports by Spanish Conquistadores that, at the time of the Spanish conquest, avocados were grown from northern Mexico south through Central America into north-western South America and south in the Andean region as far as Peru (where the avocado had been introduced shortly before the conquest), as well as into the Andean region of Venezuela.
The Aztecs used the avocado as a sex stimulant and the Aztec name for avocado was ahuacatl, meaning "testicle."
In the pre-Incan city of Chanchan, archaeologists have unearthed a large water jar, dated around 900 A.D., in the shape of an avocado.
1518 - Martin Fernandez de Enciso (1470-1528), Spanish conquistador and cosmographer, wrote the first published record that describes the avocado in his book, Suma De Geografia Que Trata De Todas Las Partidas Del Mundo, as commonly grown near Santa Marta, Colombia. This was the first account in Spanish of the discoveries in the New World.
1519 -Spanish soldier of fortune Hernando Cortez (1485-1547) set foot in Mexico City, the first white man to do so. Cortez found that the avocado was a staple in the native diet
1526 - Fernandez de Oviedo (1478-1557), historian to the conquistadores, wrote the following on avocados trees he saw along the north coast of Colombia: "In the center of the fruit is a seed like a peeled chestnut. And between this and the rind is the part which is eaten, which is abundant, and is a paste similar to butter and of very good taste."
1550 - The Spanish name, Aguacate, was first used by Pedro de Cieza de Leon (1518-1554), Spanish conquistador and historian, in a journal of his travels written in 1550. He noted that at that time the avocado grew in Panama, Ecuador, Colombia, and Peru.
1554 - The first mention of the avocado as growing in Mexico, was made by Francisco Cervantes Salazar in 1554. In his book Crónica de la Nueva España (Chronicles of New Spain), he listed the avocado among fruits sold in the market of Tenochtitlan (the name for Mexico City at that time.)
The Spanish conquistadors also discovered a unique use for the avocado seed. The seed yields a milky liquid that becomes red when exposed to air. The Spaniards found they could use this reddish brown or even blackish indelible liquid as ink to be used on documents. Some of these documents are still in existence today.
1672 -W. Hughes, physician to King Charles II of England, in his visit to Jamaica, wrote that the avocado was "One of the most rare and pleasant fruits of the island. It nourisheth and strengtheneth the body, corroborating the spirits and procuring lust exceedingly."
1700s - European sailors in the 1700s called it midshipman's butter because they liked to spread it on hardtack biscuits.
1833 - Judge Henry Perrine planted the first avocado tree in Florida.
1856 -.The California State Agricultural Society Report for 1856 stated that Thomas J. White grew the avocado in Los Angeles.
1871 - In California, the first successful introduction of avocado trees was planted by Judge R. B. Ord of Santa Barbara, who secured the trees from Mexico in 1871.

1879 - The oldest living tree is found on the University of California, Berkeley campus and was planted in 1879.
1892 - In other southern California locations, avocados were planted by various people who introduced and planted seed from Mexico and Guatemala. In the early 1890's, Juan Murrieta of Los Angeles became interested in the avocado and imported a large amount of thick-skinned fruit from Atlixco, Mexico. He distributed some of the seeds of these fruits among his friends and planted the others. From this group of seedling trees, came a number of the varieties that first attracted attention as promising commercial fruits.
1895 - In 1895, Young Charles Delmonico and Ranhofer introduced New York to the "alligator pear." or avocado, which had been newly imported from South America. Ranhofer had known of the avocado -- he mentions the avocado in his book, The Epicurean,
which he published the previous year -- but until 1895 he had been unable to secure a supply of the buttery fruit.
1911 - Frederick O. Popenoe, owner of the West Indian Gardens of Altadena, California, sent Carl Schmidt to Mexico (Mexico City, Puebla, and Atlixco) to search for avocados of outstanding quality and to locate the trees from which they came. Schmidt, who located what turned out to be the Fuerte as a dooryard tree in Atlixco, Mexico. Only one of the trees he brought back survived the great freeze of 1913 in California. This surviving tree was given the name Fuerte, Spanish for "vigorous." Schmidt said, "Two years later came the big freeze. In the spring when we began to take stock of damage, it was the Fuerte that came through and it was the only avocado that survived. It thus proved itself adaptable to our temperatures."
The Fuerte tree created California's avocado industry. Carl Schmidt was compelled to tell and retell the story of his fortuitous discovery of the Fuerte avocado. "Popenoe was a nut -- an imaginative, idealistic nut without which our nation would suffer and certainly make little progress." In the past, the avocado had a well-entrenched reputation for inducing sexual prowess and wasn't purchased or consumed by any person wishing to protect their image from slanderous assault. Growers had to sponsor a public relations campaign to dispel the ill-founded reputation before avocados became popular.
Avocados got their name from the Spanish explorers

Avocado Varieties

Are California Avocados the Best?

California avocados are generally Guatemalan varieties, and in many people's opinion they are the best. They include the famous Hass, the Fuerte, and the Reed, which are relatively small compared to Florida avocados and have a thick, pebbly skin. Sometimes called alligator pears because of their rough skin, these have an higher oil content than the larger Florida varieties and a richer, creamier taste.
The Hass is small to medium in size and oval in shape, with a very pebbled skin that goes from dark green to purplish black, a high oil content, and a buttery taste. The Hass strain was discovered by a postman named Randolph Hass, who patented it in 1935. It was registered at first by consumers, but because of its distinctively nutty, rich taste, it's now the most popular variety in the U.S. and accounts for 80 percent of the California crop.
The Fuerte strain was developed by Henry Dalton a few miles east of Los Angeles, near what is now Azusa, in 1848. Trees set out near Santa Barbara in 1871 have thrived for more than a century. These are medium-sized, pear-shaped fruits with a skin that's somewhat pebbled but smoother than the Hass. The skin starts out green and fairly shiny, then becomes duller with darker spots as the avocado ripens. The Fuerte doesn't peel as easily as the Hass, and it needs to be thoroughly ripe when it's eaten. Because it stores so well.
California avocados are available eight months of the year.
The Reed is roundish and large. It looks more like a Florida avocado, although it has slight pebbling on the skin.
Florida avocados are generally Mexican varieties. Smooth-skinned and very clean looking, they can grow to be very large. They contain less oil and more water than the rough-skinned California varieties, and although they're generally much less expensive and have a good flavor, they're not as sweet and nutty-tasting. Florida varieties include Booth, Lula, and Taylor.
Mexican avocados that are imported are, in some people's opinion, better than the Mexican varieties grown in Florida. High in quality and the least expensive, Mexican avocados include the
Bacon and Zutano, which are available twice a year--in early spring and again in early fall. Both are well suited to guacamole and salads.

US Government Revises Official Nutrition Guidelines

Is the Avocado Seasonal?
Because each variety has a different season, avocados are available year round.
An average Avocado tree produces about 120 avocados annually. Commercial orchards produce an average of 7 tonnes per hectare each year, with some orchards achieving 20 tonnes per hectare.[3] Biennial bearing can be a problem, with heavy crops in one year being followed by poor yields the next. The fruit is sometimes called an avocado pear or alligator pear, due to its shape and rough green skin. The avocado tree does not tolerate freezing temperatures, and can be grown only in subtropical or tropical climates.
It's true that avocados are high in fat -- one reason they've earned the nickname "butter pear." A medium-sized avocado contains 30 grams of fat, as much as a quarter-pound burger.

Volunteers drop 17% in Total Blood Cholesterol.

Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social in Mexico

The avocado's image first took on some polish with a 1996 study by researchers at the Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social in Mexico (Archives of Medical Research, Winter 1996) that looked at the health benefits of daily avocado consumption. The 45 volunteers who ate avocados every day for a week experienced an average 17% drop in total blood cholesterol. Their cholesterol ratio also changed in a healthy way: Their levels of LDL (low-density lipoprotein, or "bad fat") and triglycerides, both associated with heart disease, went down. Their HDL (high-density lipoprotein, or "good fat") levels, which tend to lower the risk of heart disease, climbed.
Researchers have also discovered that avocados are rich in beta-sitosterol, a natural
avocado (a-voh-KAH-doh)

Temperature Drop Lost Hundreds of Millions of dollars in 2006

AvocadoTrees cannot sustain the frost.

The subtropical species needs a climate without frost and little wind. High winds reduce the humidity, dehydrate the flowers, and affect pollination. In particular, the West Indian race requires humidity and a tropical climate which is important in flowering. When mild frost does occur, the fruit drops from the tree, reducing the yield, although the cultivar Hass can tolerate temperatures down to -1°C. Contrary to the conventional wisdom, avocado trees cannot sustain the frost. Avocado farmers in California lost hundreds of millions of dollars in 2006 due to a temperature drop. The trees also need well aerated soils, ideally more than 1 m deep. Yield is reduced when the irrigation water is highly saline. These soil and climate conditions are met only in a few areas of the world, particularly in southern Spain, the Levant, South Africa, Peru, parts of central and northern Chile, Vietnam, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Australia, New Zealand, the United States, the Philippines, Malaysia, Mexico and Central America, the center of origin and diversity of this species.
Each region has different types of cultivars. Mexico is the largest producer of the Hass variety, with over 1 million tonnes produced annually.
Propagation and rootstocks
While an avocado propagated by seed can bear fruit, it takes roughly 4-6 years to do so, and the offspring is unlikely to resemble the parent cultivar in fruit quality. Thus, commercial orchards are planted using grafted trees and rootstocks. Rootstocks are propagated by seed (seedling rootstocks) and also layering (clonal rootstocks). After about a year of growing the young plants in a greenhouse, they are ready to be grafted. Terminal and lateral grafting is normally used. The scion cultivar will then grow for another 6-12 months before the tree is ready to be sold. Clonal rootstocks have been selected for specific soil and disease conditions, such as poor soil aeration or resistance to the soil-borne disease caused by phytophthora, root rot.
Breeding
The species is partially unable to self-pollinate, because of dichogamy in its flowering. The limitation, added to the long juvenile period, makes the species difficult to breed. Most cultivars are propagated via grafting, having originated from random seedling plants or minor mutations derived from cultivars. Modern breeding programs tend to use isolation plots where the chances of cross-pollination are reduced. That is the case for programs at the University of California, Riverside, as well as the Volcani Centre and the Instituto de Investigaciones Agropecuarias in Chile.

List of avocado diseases

Matures on the Tree but Ripens off the Tree.

List of Avocado Diseases
Harvest and post-harvest
The avocado is a climacteric fruit, which means that it matures on the tree but ripens off the tree. Avocados used in commerce are picked hard and green and kept in coolers at 38 to 42°F (3.3 to 5.6°C) until they reach their final destination. Avocado must be mature to ripen properly. Avocados that fall off the tree ripen on the ground, and depending on the amount of oil they contain, their taste and texture may vary greatly. Generally, the fruit is picked once it reaches maturity; Mexican growers pick Hass-variety avocados when they have more than 23% dry matter and other producing countries have similar standards. Once picked, avocados ripen in a few days at room temperature (faster if stored with other fruits such as bananas, because of the influence of ethylene gas). Premium supermarkets sell pre-ripened avocados treated with synthetic ethylene to hasten the ripening process.[6] In some cases, avocados can be left on the tree for several months, which is an advantage to commercial growers who seek the greatest return for their crop; however, if the fruit stays on the tree for too long it will fall to the ground.
The plant can eventually become very large with a branch spread up to 6 feet. If you don't want a large plant, its size can be controlled by pinching and pruning.
The initial step in growing a pit is recognizing which side of the seed is up and which is down. Many are tapered with the broader end being the bottom. If you should have a pit that is split and has a root mass starting, be careful not to break the seed in two, if you do, it won't grow.
Avocado plants can be started in soil or water. Pits started in soil produce a much more durable and long lasting plant.
The English living in Jamaica called the avocado an alligator pear. Some speculate that they were comparing the skin to that of an alligator. Others say alligator was a corruption of ahuacatl. In Jamaica today the people call the avocado a pear. The Dutch called it avocaat; Spain abogado; France avocatier; Trinidad and Tobago zaboca, Even George Washington, First President of the United States, wrote in 1751 that agovago pears were abundant and popular in Barbados.

Reputation for Inducing Sexual prowess

Cut out the Viagra

They couldn't pronounce the Aztec word for the fruit, know as ahuacatl, "testicle," because of its shape.
Avocado - This dark green fruit's reputation as an aphrodisiac dates back to roughly 200 B.C., when it was reportedly used by Mayans and Aztecs to enhance sexual desirability. That reputation stands today, with over 60% of respondents in a 2000 survey by the California Avocado Commission saying they believe it is good for your love life.

The California avocado is considered to be an aphrodisiac by 63 percent of those experts surveyed.

a person's love life improved after eating the dark, green fruit. The respondents said they believe it could be nutrients and recently discovered phytochemicals within the avocado that explain the fruit's reputation as a strong aphrodisiac.


These are the latest findings of a Valentine's Day survey conducted by the California Avocado Commission to find out if the rumored aphrodisiacal qualities of avocados -- a rumor

It is also a traditional remedy for erectile dysfunction.

The Spanish called the aguacate, leading to the guacamole we know today.
The tree can actually be used as a storage unit by keeping the fruit on the tree for many months after maturing.

Exquisite Baked potato with Avocado, bacon and Cheese

<b style="color: red; font-weight: Bold;">ABC of Baked Potato</b>

Some years ago there was a Baked Potato Shop, who had magic ingredients in 50 different varieties of baked potatoes, I would come home from the office, or being a taxi service on Saturday after five different game of Soccer pile five children into the car and drive for 1 hour and 25 minutes to consume one of the delicious potatoes. (We then had to drive the same amount of time back to home again.) Still our stomachs were full.
We went to the 'Well' once too often, having arrived a little late, only to find the shop had been burnt down some time ago. You could imagine our disappointment. Good thing about this trip in those days Avocados were thought to be bad for your health.
The avocados became famous and good for your cholesterol.
I decided to make our own brand of baked potatoes, often cooked on a Sunday afternoon for lunch for five healthy sons and two adults.
Normally it was getting onto 2.00 PM
Baked Potatoes Stuffed with Avocados, Bacon and Cheese or chicken.
You could say the a b C of Baked potatoes

7 Idaho potatoes
1 cup sour cream
1/2 cup mashed avocado
½ cup of grated cheese
4 rashes of bacon trimmed of fat and finely cut
or 1/2 Chicken Breast
14 slices of avocado
1 teaspoons salt if desired
freshly ground black pepper to taste
1 oz butter

Instructions:
Baked Potatoes Stuffed with Avocados
Wash the Potatoes pierce each one 4 to 5 times right through to the other side and then wrap these potatoes individually in baking paper and put them all into the microwave for 5 minutes. Take the cooking paper off and cut the top off each of them to allow you to scoop out carefully the white potato out of its skin.
Mash the potato white with 1/2 cup of sour cream, three Avocados and pepper to taste. (Salt if required.)
Cut 4 rashes of pre- bacon into small pieces into your mash and mix well. Or Chicken
Spoon your potato and avocado with a little crated cheese and bacon mix into the potato shells, Cover with 2 slices of Avocado and small segment of butter. Place all your potatoes into a hot oven (375 degrees) for 10 to 15 mins, until slightly brown.
You would have to agree that was as easy as A B C
Did I mention the word exquisite?
This will be one of the best taste delights you have ever tasted.

Its like putting the Icing on the Cake

Reader Feedback

  • blackspanielgallery Mar 20, 2011 @ 9:52 pm | delete
    Nice lens
  • aesta1 Aug 20, 2010 @ 8:37 pm | delete
    I enjoyed all the information around one of my favorite fruits. New Zealand happened to be a favorite, too. It surprised me to see lots of commercial growing of avocados there when I last visited. It is interesting to read the story around this.
  • aesta1 Aug 20, 2010 @ 8:37 pm | delete
    I enjoyed all the information around one of my favorite fruits. New Zealand happened to be a favorite, too. It surprised me to see lots of commercial growing of avocados there when I last visited. It is interesting to read the story around this.
  • MrMarmalade Aug 20, 2010 @ 9:31 pm | delete
    Son 2 has just come back from an inspection. They have picked for the first time of their life. (six years)
    Thank you
  • skiesgreen Dec 17, 2009 @ 3:19 am | delete
    Nice information. I wish they would grow in Canberra. Top stuff
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MrMarmalade

Hello world. This is my bio.
Learning to cook at an early age, as his mother was constantly in hospital. Was fascinated with cooking and gave him the...
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