Jump to content

Durian Sellers - recommendations and to avoid


Aukang
 Share

Recommended Posts

10 years down the road or maybe less, the plantation owners in malaysia will be sweating when China cut off the buying and they are left with the expensive freezing equipment which they are probably forced by China to buy.

They better value Singapore durian sellers. 

↡ Advertisement
  • Praise 3
Link to post
Share on other sites

14 minutes ago, Fcw75 said:

10 years down the road or maybe less, the plantation owners in malaysia will be sweating when China cut off the buying and they are left with the expensive freezing equipment which they are probably forced by China to buy.

They better value Singapore durian sellers. 

PRC are investing in Malaysia Durian plantation especially in Raub and Karak. PRC also sent staffs to learn from Malaysian.

Link to post
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Fcw75 said:

10 years down the road or maybe less, the plantation owners in malaysia will be sweating when China cut off the buying and they are left with the expensive freezing equipment which they are probably forced by China to buy.

They better value Singapore durian sellers. 

not likely as only a very small % of the land in China is suitable for growing durian.

 

unless they grow durian in test tubes n petri dishes [laugh]

Link to post
Share on other sites

If indonesia gets into the game, similar climate with abundant land and more fertile soils, can we get $10-15/kg MSW?  

Why they haven't i don't understand.  With depressed CPO and rubber prices, durians should be more profitable. 

Interesting article. It is not just the soil, it seems.

https://www.theedgemarkets.com/article/choosing-between-oil-palm-and-durian-trees

  • Praise 1
Link to post
Share on other sites

15 minutes ago, Voodooman said:

If indonesia gets into the game, similar climate with abundant land and more fertile soils, can we get $10-15/kg MSW?  

Why they haven't i don't understand.  With depressed CPO and rubber prices, durians should be more profitable. 

Interesting article. It is not just the soil, it seems.

https://www.theedgemarkets.com/article/choosing-between-oil-palm-and-durian-trees

Unlike Palm oil, Durian tree easily affected by pest and diseases. I seen 2 years old Durian tree died due to disease.

In addition, soil of palm oil plantations has been turned into cement. It takes time to manage the soil before you can plant Durian.

Lastly, Durian tree needs to be grafted. Not ez to graft Durian tree.

Edited by Davidtch
  • Praise 4
Link to post
Share on other sites

58 minutes ago, Davidtch said:

Unlike Palm oil, Durian tree easily affected by pest and diseases. I seen 2 years old Durian tree died due to disease.

In addition, soil of palm oil plantations has been turned into cement. It takes time to manage the soil before you can plant Durian.

Lastly, Durian tree needs to be grafted. Not ez to graft Durian tree.

I’m a proud owner of 7 plot of durian plantation....totaling 0.00000000000000001 hectares of land needed.

oh, I mean pot...

0B71F511-0A3F-4D0B-B378-5095390C309D.jpeg

873CE23A-6FB7-4FEB-BB8F-CF4F07ED7FEB.jpeg

  • Praise 11
Link to post
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, mersaylee said:

I’m a proud owner of 7 plot of durian plantation....totaling 0.00000000000000001 hectares of land needed.

oh, I mean pot...

0B71F511-0A3F-4D0B-B378-5095390C309D.jpeg

873CE23A-6FB7-4FEB-BB8F-CF4F07ED7FEB.jpeg

Congrats!

You need to graft it.  Otherwise, just kampung durian.

If you need microbial solution to strengthen its root system, PM me.

Edited by Davidtch
  • Praise 4
Link to post
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, mersaylee said:

I’m a proud owner of 7 plot of durian plantation....totaling 0.00000000000000001 hectares of land needed.

oh, I mean pot...

0B71F511-0A3F-4D0B-B378-5095390C309D.jpeg

873CE23A-6FB7-4FEB-BB8F-CF4F07ED7FEB.jpeg

What is your plan when the plant grow too big for your pot? 

Link to post
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, Ender said:

What is your plan when the plant grow too big for your pot? 

Look for my MP to set up a residential fruity corner or transplant to Ubin....

  • Praise 1
Link to post
Share on other sites

28 minutes ago, Davidtch said:

Congrats!

You need to graft it.  Otherwise, just kampung durian.

If you need microbial solution to strengthen its root system, PM me.

Will do...in two years time...

in the mean time...only cow dung as nutrition 🤪

Link to post
Share on other sites

19 minutes ago, mersaylee said:

Will do...in two years time...

in the mean time...only cow dung as nutrition 🤪

If you use cow dung as nutrition, better make sure that it is not dried 1.

I can give you some microbial solution to improve decomposition of cow dung.

Otherwise, it will take a long time to decompose.

  • Praise 1
Link to post
Share on other sites

7 hours ago, Davidtch said:

PRC are investing in Malaysia Durian plantation especially in Raub and Karak. PRC also sent staffs to learn from Malaysian.

To me, don’t doubt China capability. 

 

They where got want to buy from people, they want people to buy from them.

  • Praise 3
Link to post
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Davidtch said:

If you use cow dung as nutrition, better make sure that it is not dried 1.

I can give you some microbial solution to improve decomposition of cow dung.

Otherwise, it will take a long time to decompose.

You got invest in Pahang durian plantation? 

Link to post
Share on other sites

12 minutes ago, Davidtch said:

Hearsay RM500k/acres for plantation with fruiting tree.

How to invest?

That Diana Serr's Durian Documentary, there's one PRC invested RM$2 million. Means he has 4 acre? How many MSW can he harvest per season?

Link to post
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, Ender said:

That Diana Serr's Durian Documentary, there's one PRC invested RM$2 million. Means he has 4 acre? How many MSW can he harvest per season?

RM2m maybe for a share in Durian Plantation.

For good practise sake, it's about 40 - 45 trees per acres.  Per season should be about to harvest 100 - 150 durian.

If start from stratch, 1st 5 years only pay and pay and pay money only.

  • Praise 4
Link to post
Share on other sites

The Chinese are buying up during en masse from asean to build up local appetite, and at the same time assessing which ones have highest demand among their own folks so they can grow the most profitable kind. Maybe in 5 years we can have our own durians back, but by then the world would have gone crazy for Chinese ones.

↡ Advertisement
  • Praise 2
Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...