Tuesday 18 August 2015

HOW TO GROW PASSION FRUITS

HOW TO GROW PASSION FRUITS
 

How To Grow Passionfruit Vines

What is passionfruit? What do passionfruit vines look like?

Passionfruit Vine
I've been asked about growing passionfruit trees. Well, you already know it from my headline, the passionfruit is a climbing vine. More precisely, it is a very vigorous and fast growing climbing vine.
Passionfruit vines have large, three lobed leaves, little tendrils that wrap themselves around whatever they can get hold of, and the most gorgeous flowers of all fruits in my garden. (Ok, after pineapples.)

 .) Purple Passionfruit
The fruit is either yellow or purple (depending on the variety, see below), round, and about five to eight cm across. It has a smooth, thick, pithy rind, filled with sweet, aromatic pulp, juice and seeds.
Passionfruit vines climb up any support, readily and rapidly, and they climb as high as they can.

Passionfruit Varieties, Tropical Passionfruit

There are two main passionfruit varieties. (There is also a bunch of lesser known passionfruits and related granadillas.)
Passiflora edulis is the purple passionfruit, passiflora edulis f. flavicarpa is the golden passionfruit, also called tropical passionfruit.
The purple passionfruit is a native of Brazil. Nobody knows where the tropical passionfruit originated. The tropical passionfruit is slightly bigger, and slightly more acidic. Purple passionfruit is sweeter.
Commercial growers in cooler climates often use hybrid varieties of the purple and golden passionfruit. That way they get a plant that tolerates cooler weather. (The hybrids have all kinds of fancy names, SuperSweet, Lacey, Purple Gold etc.)
The variety Panama confuses people, because it can be purple. However, Panama is a true tropical passionfruit of the type flavicarpa (which is usually golden). It is also called purple flavicarpa or Panama Red. Even though it seems to be a mix, it is not a hybrid!
Passionfruit Flower Passiflora If you live in a truly tropical climate you are obviously best of with a flavicarpa variety. They don't call them tropical passionfruit for no reason...
In a climate with cooler winters you want a purple passionfruit (P.edulis), or even a hybrid cultivar.
My climate is tropical and I grow the tropical kind, both golden and purple flavicarpa.

What do passionfruits like and dislike?

Like all fast growing plants passionfruit needs a lot of nutrients. That lush green foliage has to come from somewhere, it can not materialise out of nothing. So passionfruit vines need fertile soils, probably additional fertiliser, and they appreciate all the compost and mulch you can spare.
They also need full sun, a warm climate, and protection from wind. A sunny, sheltered site in a frost free climate is ideal. There are some purple varieties that can handle the odd very light frost. And sometimes, even though the top of a vine is killed by frost, the roots reshoot. However, the warmer the climate, the easier it is to grow passion fruit.
Passionfruit need something to climb over. A fence, a water tank, a trellis, anything will do. Watch where you plant them, because they will be up in the crown of a nearby tree before you know...
Passionfruit plants have a vulnerable root system. A healthy soil, teeming with worms and microbes and lots of organic matter is your best bet. If your soil is poor you will get problems with wilt diseases, root rot and nematodes. Heavy clay soils also cause problems with rot diseases.
Watering: the root system of passionfruits is small for the size of the plant it has to sustain. Especially while a passionfruit is fruiting it needs a lot of water. It needs a very regular water supply at all times. However, passionfruit can't handle waterlogged soil. Make sure your site is free draining.

Growing Passionfruit Seeds

If I can grow something from seed I will. If I can grow something from the seed of store bought fruit, even better. Why spend money on a nursery plant if you don't need to?
Growing passionfruit seeds is not hard. The seed just needs to be fresh. For some reason old seed takes a lot longer to germinate. So buy some nice passionfruit, separate half a dozen seeds from the pulp, and plant them as soon as possible. They take about ten to twenty days to germinate.
If you buy your seed then it's likely older, so be prepared to wait. Old passionfruit seeds can take months to germinate. The best way seems to be to just put them in the garden and leave them be, and eventually they come up. Or not.
There are some tricks like soaking the seeds in warm water first, and some people swear by vinegar. Others report their acidic soil seems to do the job. I believe in fresh seed. Whenever I used fresh seed it came up without problems.

Reasons to not grow passionfruit from seed.

Seeds of hybrid varieties do not grow true to type. If you live in a cooler climate the passionfruit you buy may be a hybrid variety. If you grow that seed you don't know what you'll get...
Find out what the fruit is that you buy, buy seed so you know what you are planting, or even buy a plant from a nursery.
Another reason for not growing passionfruit from seed is the high susceptibility of the purple varieties and the hybrids to the root disease Fusarium wilt. There are resistant root stocks (flavicarpa varieties). If Fusarium wilt is a problem in your soil, and if you need to grow susceptible varieties because of your cool climate, then you may want to invest in a grafted plant from a nursery.
Ah, it's nice to live in the true tropics. All tropical passionfruits are reasonably resistant to Fusarium wilt, and they are also more resistant to nematodes, another problem of growing passionfruit.

Planting Passionfruit Vines

You can plant out your seedlings when they are about eight inches high (20 cm). If you wait too long and they are much bigger than that prune them back as you plant them out. It helps reduce moisture loss while the root system settles in.
Passionfruit growing on trellis.
Make sure that whatever support you have in mind is strong enough for the vine. They do get huge and heavy pretty quickly and need something sturdy.
Also be aware that a vigorously growing passionfruit will climb over any- and everything it can reach and can quickly smother plants. Make your own life easier by growing passionfruit away from other shrubs and trees.
(Note to self, I should heed that advice myself.)
Be careful to disturb the roots as little as possible. Dig a big enough hole, at least twice as big as the root ball, and mix the soil with compost before you back fill. Then mulch thickly around the plant.
Passionfruit tendril hanging on. In the early days you may have to train your vine up the support, by carefully tying it.
But it will quickly get the message. As soon as there is something for the little tendrils to grab hold of, say the first wire on your trellis, it will climb on its own.

Feeding And Watering

Yep, plenty of both, please. Passionfruit needs a steady supply of both water and nutrients.
Of course, as always, don't overdo it. Overwatering can lead to root problems. Make sure you don't have water puddling and not draining away.
Overfeeding can also lead to problems. Too much nitrogen (most commercial fertilisers are heavy on nitrogen) will lead to lots of soft green leaves, attractive to all sorts of insects and diseases, but you get little fruit.
So, lots of compost, lots of mulch, and the odd sprinkle of a balanced, organic, slow release fertiliser.

How long does passionfruit take to fruit?

Ripe Passionfruit That depends on several factors. The tropical varieties fruit quicker then the purple passionfruit.
Any passionfruit will reach maturity sooner if growing in a warmer climate.
A passionfruit vine planted in spring fruits sooner than a passionfruit planted in autumn.
In ideal conditions (early spring planting in the tropics) you can get fruit within six months. Autumn planting in a cooler climate means you may have to wait for over 12 months.

When to harvest passionfruit?

That's what I love best about growing passionfruit. You don't need to worry about harvesting them. When they are ready they'll drop. Dropping on the ground does not hurt them the least bit. You just collect them as often as you feel like it.
When one of my passionfruit vines is in peak production I usually do it twice a day. My vines are very productive. Otherwise I will pick up my red passionfruit daily. It has a much thinner skin and I find it goes mouldy on the inside unless I put it in the fridge straight away.
My yellow passionfruits do not mind lying on the ground in the sun for a few days, and then sitting on the kitchen bench for weeks. They shrivel up and look awful, but they are still juicy and delicious inside.

Pruning Passionfruit

Pruning passionfruit is essential.
Well, usually it is. I don't always do it. Some of my passionfruit vines raced up into some huge trees and I can't get to them. So I just let them be.
Anyway, most people grow passionfruit on much smaller structures, like fences or trellises. If you don't prune your passionfruit you end up up with a thick, tangled mess of dead wood, and a plant that has lots of problems with fungal diseases.
Don't be shy, take your cutters to it. In the tropics you can prune a passionfruit as soon as it has finished fruiting. In cooler climates prune passionfruit in early spring.
Cut out everything that is dead or weak, trim healthy branches by about a third, and even fully remove some of them. You have to keep the plant within bounds, you need to make sure that some air can circulate through the foliage, and you want to stimulate vigorous new growth. Passionfruit only sets fruit on new growth.
If your passionfruit is growing where it shouldn't, or threatening to smother other plants, you can of course trim those shoots at any time.

How long does a passionfruit vine live?

I already mentioned it, growing passionfruit can be tricky because they are very susceptible to all sorts of root problems. Usually the plants are not all that long lived, five to seven years is a long life for a passionfruit vine.
Commercial passionfruit growers work on a life span of three years for their passionfruit vines. However, a well tended, well fed vine in a good location in healthy soil may live a lot longer.
I find that after three years the productivity of a vine definitely decreases, so I don't plan for them to live any longer than that. I simply start one or two new plants every other year. I'm lucky enough to have the space to do so.
If you don't have that space you will need to watch your passionfruit carefully, so that if you notice problems you can replant in time.
Don't be too disheartened if your healthy and productive vine after a few years suddenly dies. I'm afraid that passionfruit have a bad habit of doing just that.

1 comment:

  1. I am a commercial passion fruits grower and I am encouraged,my vines withered but I didn't give up, I planted other seedlings and they are flourishing, thanks,Evelyn from Uganda

    ReplyDelete