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Gardening

You Can Grow Your Own Avocados at Home Using the Leftover Pits

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Avocados are one of the wonderful fruits of summer. High in nutrition and flavor, there’s nothing like a bowl of zesty lime guacamole with tortilla chips. The next time you’re making guacamole or slicing an avocado for a salad, try saving your pits to grow into avocado trees. It’s surprisingly easy to grow your own avocado tree from seed, and it makes a great educational project for grandkids as well.

Check out our handy-dandy guide below, complete with photos, to learn how to grow an avocado tree indoors from a seed.

1. Remove and Clean Pit

You’ll need to start by removing the pit from the avocado carefully (without cutting it), and then washing it clean of all the avocado fruit (often it helps to soak the pit in some water for a few minutes and then scrub all the remaining fruit off). Be careful not to remove the brown skin on the pit — that’s the seed cover.

2. Locate Which End is ‘Up’ and Which End is ‘Down’

Some avocado pits are slightly oblong, whereas others are shaped almost like perfect spheres — but all avocado pits have a bottom (from where the roots will grow), and a top (from which the sprout will grow). The slightly pointier end is the top, and the flat end is the bottom. In order to get your pit to sprout, you will need to place the bottom root end in water, so it’s very important to figure out which end is the top and which is the bottom before you go piercing it with toothpicks.

3. Pierce With Three Toothpicks

Take three toothpicks and stick them at a slight downward angle into the avocado seed, spaced evenly around the circumference of the avocado. These toothpicks are your avocado scaffolding, which will allow you to rest the bottom half of the avocado in water, so therefore the toothpicks need to be wedged in there firmly. I recommend sticking them in at a slight angle (pointing down), so that more of your avocado base rests in the water when you set this over a glass.

4. Place Seed Half-Submerged in a Glass of Water

And set on a quiet windowsill with sunlight. It’s helpful to use a clear glass so you can easily see when roots start to grow, and also when the water needs to be changed. Many guides recommend to change the water every day. I found, through trial and error, that it is better to change the water every five days to a week or so. You do want to make sure you change the water regularly to prevent mold, bacteria, and fungus growth, which can doom your little avocado sprout.

5. Wait for Your Avocado Seed to Sprout

Many guides say sprouting can take anywhere from two to four weeks. In my experience, it usually takes at least eight weeks to get a sprout, so be patient. Here is the process you will witness:

  • The top of the avocado pit will dry out and form a crack, and the outer brown seed skin will slough off.
  • The crack will extend all the way to the bottom of the avocado pit, and through the crack at the bottom, a tiny taproot will begin to emerge.
  • The taproot will grow longer and longer (and may branch), and eventually a small sprout will peek through the top of the avocado pit.
  • Do not allow your taproot to dry out while it’s not submerged — doing so will be the death of your plant.

6. Pot in Soil When Tree is About Six Inches Tall

When the stem is about six inches long, cut it back to about three inches, this will encourage new growth. When it hits six inches again, pot it up in a rich humus soil in a 10 inch diameter pot, leaving the top half of the seed exposed. Place on a sunny windowsill. Avocados love sun — the more sun the better.

7. Water and Watch it Grow

Give it frequent waterings with an occasional deep soak. The soil should always be moist, but not saturated. Yellowing leaves are a sign of over-watering. Let the plant dry out for a few days.

8. Pinch Out Top Leaves to Encourage Bushiness

When the stem reaches 12 inches tall, pinch out the top two sets of leaves. This will encourage the plant to grow side shoots and more leaves, making it bushy. Each time the plant grows another six inches pinch out the two newest sets of leaves on top.

Troubleshooting Bugs

My avocado trees seem to collect aphids — the nasty critters can’t get enough of the delicious avocado leaves. If you get them, here’s how to get rid of them: Wash all of the aphids off the plant by spraying your plant down with a hose outside or in the sink or shower. Once the little pests are off, spray your plant with a mixture of water with a small squirt of dishwashing liquid and a teaspoon of neem oil. This will keep aphids from returning. Check your plant every four to five days and re-clean and spray when necessary.

Wintertime

Baby avocado trees can kick it outdoors in summer. But, if you live anywhere where it gets cooler than 75 degrees Fahrenheit you’ll need to bring them back indoors in the fall and winter before the temperatures fall.

How to Grow an Avocado Tree That Bears Fruit

It’s the million-dollar question: will your carefully planted avocado tree ever, you know, give you avocados? It’s hard to say. Sometimes avocado plants will begin growing fruit after they’re three or four years old, others take 15+ years to grow fruit, and some never do. It helps to have several avocado trees growing together to aid with pollination. However, don’t expect the fruit to be anything like the avocado that yielded your seed. Commercial avocados are grown from grafted branches to control the outcome of the fruit — a naturally grown avocado may be very different than its parent!

This article originally appeared on our sister site, Homes to Love.

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