Bulbs Flower Basics Flower Beds & Specialty Gardens Flower Garden Garden Furniture Garden Gnomes Garden Seeds Garden Sheds Garden Statues Garden Tools & Supplies Gardening Basics Green & Organic Groundcovers & Vines Growing Annuals Growing Basil Growing Beans Growing Berries Growing Blueberries Growing Cactus Growing Corn Growing Cotton Growing Edibles Growing Flowers Growing Garlic Growing Grapes Growing Grass Growing Herbs Growing Jasmine Growing Mint Growing Mushrooms Orchids Growing Peanuts Growing Perennials Growing Plants Growing Rosemary Growing Roses Growing Strawberries Growing Sunflowers Growing Thyme Growing Tomatoes Growing Tulips Growing Vegetables Herb Basics Herb Garden Indoor Growing Landscaping Basics Landscaping Patios Landscaping Plants Landscaping Shrubs Landscaping Trees Landscaping Walks & Pathways Lawn Basics Lawn Maintenance Lawn Mowers Lawn Ornaments Lawn Planting Lawn Tools Outdoor Growing Overall Landscape Planning Pests, Weeds & Problems Plant Basics Rock Garden Rose Garden Shrubs Soil Specialty Gardens Trees Vegetable Garden Yard Maintenance

How to Grow a Papaya Plant From Seeds

How to Start Lemon Seeds Indoors - watch on youtube
How to Grow a Papaya Plant From Seeds

How to Grow a Papaya Plant From Seeds. Just one year after planting papaya seeds, you could enjoy a taste of the tropics whenever you want with home-grown papayas. Papaya plants grow quickly, given the proper care and a warm climate. The plant has one main trunk and grows large leaves out of the top, similar to a palm tree. The papaya fruits grow...

Just one year after planting papaya seeds, you could enjoy a taste of the tropics whenever you want with home-grown papayas. Papaya plants grow quickly, given the proper care and a warm climate. The plant has one main trunk and grows large leaves out of the top, similar to a palm tree. The papaya fruits grow on the trunk of the tree, just below the leaves. Plant papayas only if your temperatures rarely, if ever, drop below freezing, because frost damages papaya plants.
Things You'll Need
Papaya
Colander
5-gallon pots
Potting soil
Shovel
Compost and peat moss
Open a ripe papaya fruit, remove the black seeds and place them in a colander.
Rinse the seeds under cool running water and rub them to remove the gelatinous material coating the seeds.
Fill a 5-gallon pot with sterile potting soil for each papaya plant you would like to grow. You need at least three plants to guarantee that you will have a mix of male plants for pollination and female plants to produce fruit.
Plant three to five papaya seeds in each pot, about 1 inch deep and 3 or more inches apart from one another.
Set the pots out in an area that receives full sunlight. Wait two to five weeks for the seeds to germinate.
Choose your outdoor planting site, which should be in full sunlight and in a warm area of the yard. Planting on the southern side of a house helps with reflected sunlight and shelter from the wind.
Incorporate compost and peat moss into the soil at each planting site with a shovel. Planting sites should be spaced about 8 to 10 feet apart from each other.
Dig a hole at each planting site and gently plant each pot of seedlings in a hole.
Wait until the seedlings begin flowering, at about five to six months old. Identify female plants, which develop large flowers directly out of the trunk and male plants, which develop sets of small flowers growing on branched stems from the trunk. Cut back all but one seedling at each site, keeping mostly female plants and at least one male plant to pollinate every 10 female plants.

Check out these related posts