Northern Queensland Permaculture

Earth Care, People Care, Fair Share

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

wiki:cedar_bay_cherry [2020/10/13 20:51] – ↷ Page moved from wiki:cedar_bay_cherry to plants:cedar_bay_cherry jaffawiki:cedar_bay_cherry [Unknown date] (current) – external edit (Unknown date) 127.0.0.1
Line 1: Line 1:
 + ====== Cedar bay cherry ====== 
 + ===== Botanical Information ===== 
 +^Botanical Information^^
 +^Order |  Myrtales| 
 +^Family |  Myrtaceae| 
 +^Genus | Eugenia| 
 +^Common Name | Cedar bay cherry| 
 +^Species | E. reinwardtiana| 
 + ===== Maturity days ===== 
 +  * 
 + ===== Planting Months ===== 
 +^Planting months^^^^^^^^^^^^
 +| Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
 +|           | X       | X                                                                                                 
 + ===== Permaculture uses ===== 
 +^Permaculture uses^^^
 +| Usage 1| Usage 2 | Usage 3 | 
 +| | Food_Forest| Fruit| 
 + ===== Growing condition comments ===== 
 +^Growing Condition ^Comment^
 +|Drought Tolerant | Yes| 
 +| Humidity tolerant | No | 
 +| Planting area | Ground| 
 +|Sunlight | Full_sun| 
 + ===== Photos ===== 
 +^ Photos ^^^
 +| {{ :wiki:CedarBay%20Cherry1.png?200|}}| {{ :wiki:CedarBay%20Cherry2.png?200|}}| {{ :wiki:?200|}}| 
 + ===== Short comments ===== 
 +Grows in Townsville, native to north queensland. Small shrub. Full sun required.
 + ===== General comments ===== 
 +Eugenia reinwardtiana (Chamorro: a'abang) is a shrub to small tree in the family Myrtaceae, (Native to tropical forests in northern Queensland, Australia; Indonesia,[2] and the Pacific Islands). Also known as the Cedar Bay cherry. Other common names includes; Beach Cherry, Australian Beach, Mountain Stopper,[3][4] and Nioi (Hawaii).[5] They are typically 2 to 6 m (6.6 to 19.7 ft) in height.[6]  The tree is particularly common around the Cedar Bay National Park in northern Australia and the edible fruit was especially popular with the hippies who lived there in the 1970s.  The fruits are green at first, when ripe it turns to a bright orange-red colour, these fruits are also taste sweet and delicious with its soft flesh.[3]  The tree is cultivated to a limited extent for its edible sweetish fruit that is often eaten out-of-hand, used to flavour drinks and candies, or as a preserve. The fruit is a source of antioxidants.[7]  The tree is well-suited to amenity horticulture in the tropics, and is grown in the median strips in Cairns. It is readily propagated from fresh seed.[6]  This species is susceptible to Myrtle Rust (Puccinia psidii).[3] Time to Fruit/Flower/Harvest: 4-5 Years  https://www.daleysfruit.com.au/bushfood/cedarbay.htm    
 + ===== Tags ===== 
 +{{tag> Myrtales  Myrtaceae Eugenia Cedar bay cherry Perennial  Food_Forest Fruit Full_sun Ground }}
 +
  
Print/export
QR Code
QR Code wiki:cedar_bay_cherry (generated for current page)