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Food news from the UC Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources
Produce at the market
Comments:
by Martin Anenberg
on May 2, 2017 at 2:23 PM
John,  
 
I am a locally grown produce distributor located in Los Angeles. I am interested in bringing different and unique varieties of pomegranates to market. Feel free to contact me to discuss ways we can work together. Thank you.
by Maxwell Norton
on May 4, 2017 at 1:47 PM
Getting to good sugar without cracking is important. If these are all fully mature fruit, then that is encouraging.
by Sharmila B
on May 28, 2017 at 2:02 PM
Hi Mr. Carter,  
We are avid gardeners and live in the bay area(east bay hills). We have many fruit trees in our backyard including 4 pomegranates, - wonderful, Eversweet, Parfianka & sweet. We have had wonderful for a few years and haven't tried the others yet as they are still young. Parfianka is flowering right now and can't wait to try the fruit this fall. Hoping we would get atleast a few from Eversweet & Sweet next year.  
As always looking to try new varieties, where can we buy Phoenicia and other varieties.  
Thank you  
Sharmila
by marcos
on July 7, 2017 at 5:40 PM
I am forming an orchard of varieties of pomegranate of several places, if somebody has like to supply some seeds of varieties.  
I am also looking for varieties of pomegranate azerbaijin, turbekistan, babylon, syrian, Sakerdze, Phenicia.
by Connie Doyle
on October 16, 2018 at 12:08 PM
I think I have a Blaze variety in my backyard! The fruit is pale pink with a mild sweet flavor. The house has UCR connections, so I'm pretty sure this might be one of Mr. Chater's grandfather's trees - so cool! It's at least 30 years old, so I'm learning how to propagate a few new trees, and stumbled on this article while learning about my tree. :-)
by Jing L Alford
on November 4, 2018 at 6:20 PM
Hi, there,  
I have a farm at coastal Georgia, zone 9. I am looking for some soft aril pomegranate to our farm. PLEASE let me know if you have these soft aril varieties to share. Thank you!
by Nancy McDonald
on January 31, 2019 at 12:16 PM
I have a unknown Variety of Pomegranate that doesn't ripen until late October and usually not until November. The original tree is growing in Pomona, Ca. but where my husbands Aunt and Uncle got it from is unknown since they are not living to ask them. I think it might be Sharp Velvet, but I am not sure. The fruit is a dark red with a garnet red flesh. If anyone would like cuttings I am cutting it well back this year and I am attending the CRFG meeting at the LA Arboretum on Saturday, Feb 2 and will be taking some cuttings.
by Michael Marsh
on August 12, 2020 at 7:23 PM
Al-sirin-nar is rocking it in my backyard in North Texas. Planted it one year ago. Cold hardy, I believe, so may thrive here.
by Alexis Moore
on October 7, 2020 at 4:19 PM
Hi, I live in the Coachella Valley, which is desert. I just moved into my house and have a loaded Pomegranate tree in my yard. I understand from researching that there are over 700 varieties of poms! wow! The tree I have has a bunch of large light orangish modeled fruit, when I cut it open it is on the dry side, thick skinned and yellow-is seed inside. what is the variety if you know. thanks so much ! image here in pdf.
by Joe
on March 6, 2024 at 6:02 PM
I have a pomegranate tree with a label from exotic fruits with the number 156 on it. No name… can someone tell me what verity is 156?
by Joe
on March 6, 2024 at 6:03 PM
I have a pomegranate tree with a label from exotic fruits with the number 156 on it. No name… can someone tell me what verity is 156?
 
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