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Send e-mail to rarefruit@san.rr.com and introduce yourself by sending the following information (in your words is better) including: Your real name (first and last)... Where you live... Your e-mail address-for receiving newsletter-if different from this email address... Fruit trees you are now growing....
Comments, anything readers will find of interest about you: Questions to be answered by newsletter readers: I'll edit and include your letter in the next issue of Rare Fruit News Online, and add your name to the mailing list for the Rare Fruit News Online. |
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When you write letters to be published, try to make the 'Subject' fit the actual contents of the letter. Please take time to use standard punctuation, and it helps if you use the name of the reader to whom your comments are directed, when you reply to a letter in the newsletter. Letters will be edited and I must reserve the right to refuse to publish anything I believe to be false or inflammatory. For some strange reason, names 'fall off' of the mailing list, and I won't know about it until a reader tells me. Don't hesitate to let me know, if you don't receive the newsletter on the first and fifteenth of each month. If you find web pages with useful information, please let us know. At our home in San Diego, you will find such fruit as Mango, Banana, Cherimoya, Pitanga, Guava, Rose Apple, Cherry-of-the-Rio-Grande, Atemoya, Capulin Cherry, Longan, Passion Fruit, White Sapote, Black Sapote, Papaya, Jakfruit, Carambola, Citrus, Jujube, Pineapple, Japanese Persimmon, Pitaya, and a few others. Most people in the United States would call those rare fruit. Mango is my favorite fruit, but Pitahaya (aka Pitaya, Dragon Fruit, etc.) has taken up most of my time and energy in recent years. Paul Thomson in nearby Bonsall has experimented with crossing different Hylocereus varieties. Most of my plants came from him. We also have fruit not so rare: Apple, Plum, Peach, Apricot, Nectarine, Grape, Blackberry, Mulberry, Blueberry.... Please tell us what's growing at your home. |
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Leo and Betty moved to San Diego in 1963, from Kansas. They lived about three miles from the coast for almost thirty years, where it was too cool to satisfactorily grow some of the rare fruit. In 1992, they moved farther inland, and have had greater success. Leo has been a member of California Rare Fruit Growers, Inc. since about 1970. He retired from teaching in 1993, and has been struggling to learn to play the fiddle ever since. He doesn't spend as much time outdoors as he would like. Too much time is also spent in front of the computer. We have three children: Brenda, Peggy, and Leo, Jr. Brenda lives in St. Paul, Minn., and plays violin in the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra. She and husband David are parents of our two grand-daughters, Erin and Sara. Peggy lives in Del Mar, near San Diego, is a pediatrician. She and husband Michael Stelmach are parents of our youngest grandson, Robert. Leo, Jr. lives in Poway, only a few miles from our home, and is a computer software engineer. He and wife Noy are parents of our grandson, Joshua. |
| Betty (Cox) is a retired school teacher, from Pittsburg Kansas. She wrote an autobiography of her mother's life in the Ozarks of Arkansas, Winfrey Valley Girl-Stories of a Child of the 1920s Ozarks. If you want information about her book, send e-mail to Betty, Betty (Cox) Manuel, with questions or comments. The book will appeal to you if you have lived in the Ozarks, had relatives who did, or if you're just interested in reading about people who are isolated, independent, and deeply caring about their neighbors. |
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Click on one of these to get ALL of the issues for that year. Hopefully, in time, they will be edited and presented in a more uniform style. |
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I enthusiastically recommend the following links:
California Rare Fruit Growers, Inc.
Santol's Tropical Fruit Home Page, by Bruce Livingston
Fruit Lover's Megalinks, Oscar Jaitt
