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I made some mistakes so I remade the video. As always, thank you everyone for your feedback. Today I'm going to show you the avocados I grow in Japan. Home gardeners should definitely watch this. 【Contents】 00:00 Introduction 00:31 What is avocado? 01:18 Classification and How to Choose the Right Variety 02:21 Avocado old Tree types? 03:01 Mexican race : Strong cold tolerance 03:28 Guatemalan race: Moderate cold and salt tolerance 03:48 West Indian race: Best salt tolerance 04:39 Avocado flower types? Type A and Type B 06:35 Avocado flower: Type A pattern 07:16 Water management 08:55 Maintain tree vigor, Once Lost, It's hard go regain. 10:10 Best light condition of avocado? 11:17 How to prune avocados? 12:42 Wind protection 13:17 Avocado Rootstock Problems 14:58 Conclusion ■Recommend videos Amazing banana cultivation techniques that no one knows about. • Amazing banana cultivation techniques that... avocado infinite reproduction • avocado infinite reproduction Pruning video viewed 1.75 million times in Japan • This Scientific Pruning Technique Will Cha... The amazing method of grafting and its essence. • The amazing method of grafting and its ess... ■What Kind of Tree is an Avocado? Avocados originated in Central and South America but are now cultivated across the globe. Due to their exceptional nutritional value, they’re often called "butter of the forest." The fruits are rich in healthy fats, vitamin E, potassium, and dietary fiber. As global health awareness grows, so does the demand for avocados. With the right knowledge, anyone can grow them at home. I encourage you to try producing your own high-quality avocados — worthy of the name “forest butter.” ■Classification and How to Choose the Right Variety. When it comes to avocado cultivation, the most crucial factor is selecting the right variety. Each variety has distinct traits that directly affect how easy or difficult it is to grow. There’s a saying: "No technique surpasses the right variety." Always keep this in mind. If you match the variety with your environment, avocado cultivation can be surprisingly simple. On the other hand, choosing a poorly matched variety makes success much harder. In cooler regions, select cold-hardy varieties. In areas prone to salt damage, choose varieties with West Indian genes. If typhoons or hurrica nes are a concern, early-fruiting types that can be harvested before storm season are optimal. Avocados are broadly classified into three ancestral races: ・Mexican Race — relatively cold-tolerant. ・Guatemalan Race — intermediate characteristics. ・West Indian Race — tolerant of heat, humidity, and salt. These names come from the regions where these types were historically grown. But since all races can interbreed, many modern varieties are hybrids — including second- or even third-generation hybrids. ■Flower Types and Whether You Need Two Trees. I often get this question: "Do I need to plant two avocado trees to get fruit?" To put it simply — planting more trees increases your chances of success. Due to the unique flowering behavior of avocados, a single tree often fails to fruit effectively. Three trees are better than two, and four are better than three. If space allows, even planting 10 trees is ideal for consistent fruiting. This is because more trees mean more pollen, and greater pollen availability increases cross-pollination and fruit set. Avocados are divided into Type A and Type B based on flowering behavior. Combining both types in your orchard leads to better pollination. Here’s how avocado flowers work: Each flower blooms twice in its lifetime. ・Day 1: The flower opens as female (stigma active, no pollen release) ・It then closes and reopens on Day 2 as male (stamens release pollen, stigma no longer receptive) Type A: Female stage in the morning of Day 1. Male stage in the afternoon of Day 2. Type B: Female stage in the afternoon of Day 1. Male stage in the morning of Day 2. Because the male and female stages don’t overlap within one flower, a single tree often cannot pollinate itself effectively. However, in cooler weather, flower timing shifts and stages overlap. In such cases, self-pollination may occur even with a single tree. Members only How to grow bananas. • How to grow bananas. ==================================== ■HP https://okinawan-avocado.com ■kenyu's instagram / kenyu.uehara ■kenyu's X / kenyu0501_ ===================================== #avocado #howtogrowavocados #avocado_cultivation #gardening #avocados