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Having Spent $5,000 19 Years Ago On A Lychee Tree From China, This Farmer Has Successfully Bred Seedless Lychees From It
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Having Spent $5,000 19 Years Ago On A Lychee Tree From China, This Farmer Has Successfully Bred Seedless Lychees From It

After Being Unsuccessful For Almost 20 Years, This Farmer Managed To Grow Australia’s First Ever Seedless LycheesThis Farmer Grew Australia's First Ever Seedless Lychees After Nearly 20 Years Of Selective BreedingThis Australian Farmer Developed A Type Of Seedless Lychee After 19 Years Of Hard WorkHaving Spent $5,000 19 Years Ago On A Lychee Tree From China, This Farmer Has Successfully Bred Seedless Lychees From ItThis Farmer Spent 20 Years Selectively Breeding And He Finally Managed To Get Australia's First Seedless LycheesAustralian Farmer Grew Australia's First Seedless Lychees After Almost 20 Years Of Selective BreedingHaving Spent $5,000 19 Years Ago On A Lychee Tree From China, This Farmer Has Successfully Bred Seedless Lychees From ItHaving Spent $5,000 19 Years Ago On A Lychee Tree From China, This Farmer Has Successfully Bred Seedless Lychees From ItHaving Spent $5,000 19 Years Ago On A Lychee Tree From China, This Farmer Has Successfully Bred Seedless Lychees From ItHaving Spent $5,000 19 Years Ago On A Lychee Tree From China, This Farmer Has Successfully Bred Seedless Lychees From It
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Having been brought up in a culture that values all things homegrown, I have a special appreciation for fruit and vegetables. Harvesting it all tends to be a bit of a hassle, but it’s always worthwhile.

Everyone has their favorites. The banana seems to be the best choice among the people I know: it’s an optimum-sized fruit that is not messy and, above all, doesn’t have any seeds or pits. In fact, these are the main criteria that determine how popular a fruit will be. Well, the market hears that and delivers.

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    Meet Tibby Dixon, the man who grew the first ever seedless lychee fruit in Australia

    Image credits: Camilleri’s Farm Market

    19 years ago, a farmer by the name of Tibby Dixon from North Queensland, Australia bought a lychee (pronounced lie-chee, rhymes with crikey) tree from China. He spent $5,000 Australian dollars on this purchase with the hopes of breaking away from traditional fruit farming & starting to experiment with new fruit varieties that would be sold to other farmers.

    Well, fast forward all those years and this same farmer successfully grows the first seedless lychee fruit in Australia. It took him nearly 20 years of painstaking work with selective breeding from just one tree to pull this off. Sounds amazing, doesn’t it?

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    Image credits: Camilleri’s Farm Market

    It took him 19 years to selectively breed the seedless variety of lychee fruit

    Image credits: ABC / Melanie Groves

    These newly-bred seedless lychees are considered a medium-size fruit, roughly 4–5 centimeters (1.5–1.9 inches) in diameter. It comes in varying shades of red, ranging from raspberry to dark cherry red. The inside is white and squishy—and, of course, seedless.

    Lichees (Lat. Litchi chinensis) are the only members within the genus Litchi of soapberry family (Lat. Sapindaceae). It is a tropical fruit tree hailing from Southeast China, cultivation records of which date back to the 11th century. While China is the largest producer of lychee fruit, other countries in Southeast Asia, the Indian Subcontinent, and South Africa also grow them.

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    Image credits: ABC / Melanie Groves

    Dixon initially paid 5,000 dollars for his first lychee tree, which was brought in from China

    Image credits: ABC/ Renee Cluff

    Growing the seedless lychees was a bit of a challenge for a number of reasons. Besides selective breeding and cross-pollination requiring knowledge and skill, time is also a necessity as several generations of plants have to pass until the desired plant characteristic develops. Apart from that, it also demands proper tools and labor. And even then it is all up to chance because of genetics.

    Even though it is difficult to explain the seedless lychee’s taste as everyone experiences it differently, the best that Mr. Dixon could explain was that it tastes a little bit like a pineapple. What is definitely sure is that it is taste-wise very different from all of the cultivars available.

    Image credits: ABC / Derek Foley

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    Camilleri’s Farm Market also shared a video of Dixon introducing the new seedless lychees

    Video Source: Camilleri’s Farm Market

    Tibby Dixon has been growing lychees for nearly 40 years now, all in Sarina, Queensland. For the last 10 years, he made sure to always have new varieties of lychees.

    He was able to harvest a few kilograms of the seedless lychees this time around. So, putting the new-found fruit on store shelves won’t be possible for another several years. However, the farmer is planning on growing the trees to establish more plants, eventually leading to the commercialization of the seedless fruit.

    What are some of your favorite fruits? Let us know in the comments below!

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    Robertas Lisickis

    Robertas Lisickis

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    Read more »

    Some time ago, Robertas used to spend his days watching how deep the imprint in his chair will become as he wrote for Bored Panda. Wrote about pretty much everything under and beyond the sun. Not anymore, though. He's now probably playing Gwent or hosting Dungeons and Dragons adventures for those with an inclination for chaos.

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    Robertas Lisickis

    Robertas Lisickis

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    Some time ago, Robertas used to spend his days watching how deep the imprint in his chair will become as he wrote for Bored Panda. Wrote about pretty much everything under and beyond the sun. Not anymore, though. He's now probably playing Gwent or hosting Dungeons and Dragons adventures for those with an inclination for chaos.

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    Shirley Liu
    Community Member
    4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    In China we have a beautiful love story about lichee: in Tang Dynasty there was a Imperial concubine who loves lychee, but lyvhee only grews in southern China while the capital at that time was in northern China. So the emperior send fast carriage to bring fresh lychees to his concubine everyday. After that, we say :" when we saw fast horses runing, we know it's lychees coming." and now we have a lychee breed named" the smile of Imperial concubine"

    NQ L
    Community Member
    4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I don't mind the seeds. I actually think seedless fruits are not as good as the ones with seeds. For example, watermelon. Seeded watermelons are sweeter.

    Diphylleia Grayi
    Community Member
    4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I agree with you, some tile ago in dw was a documentary related with it, apples with no seed were fruit of human pollination with comedones (?) The apples were bigger but not as much as it is in natural condition

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    Shirley Liu
    Community Member
    4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    In China we have a beautiful love story about lichee: in Tang Dynasty there was a Imperial concubine who loves lychee, but lyvhee only grews in southern China while the capital at that time was in northern China. So the emperior send fast carriage to bring fresh lychees to his concubine everyday. After that, we say :" when we saw fast horses runing, we know it's lychees coming." and now we have a lychee breed named" the smile of Imperial concubine"

    NQ L
    Community Member
    4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I don't mind the seeds. I actually think seedless fruits are not as good as the ones with seeds. For example, watermelon. Seeded watermelons are sweeter.

    Diphylleia Grayi
    Community Member
    4 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I agree with you, some tile ago in dw was a documentary related with it, apples with no seed were fruit of human pollination with comedones (?) The apples were bigger but not as much as it is in natural condition

    Load More Replies...
    Load More Comments
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