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Favourite fruit

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Created by poor relative > 9 months ago, 23 May 2009
poor relative
WA, 9106 posts
23 May 2009 9:13PM
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Its gotta be peaches.



or mangoes

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Greenroom
WA, 7608 posts
23 May 2009 9:20PM
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Reli, mmm mouth watering. The pictures of the fruit look nice too
Favourate fruit would have to be a nice, soft, juicy pear. I eat pears every day.
Also munch down a stick of celery, a carrot and a cucumber every day.
Mmm...

Marvin
WA, 725 posts
23 May 2009 9:37PM
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fuji apples in season

raspberries and boysenberries, fresh off the cane

easty
TAS, 2213 posts
24 May 2009 9:50AM
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Coming from Tassie, I love mangoes and bananas! Favourite would be a particular custard apple I had in Cooktown once - still remember the taste. Apricots from my tree are pretty tasty too.

Gizmo
SA, 2865 posts
24 May 2009 10:01AM
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Golden honeydew mellons and Gold Kiwi fruit ......

j murray
SA, 947 posts
24 May 2009 11:10AM
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Guava , avocado, watermelon

elizabethb
QLD, 2081 posts
24 May 2009 11:44AM
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Apple and Mandarin every morning now.
Bananas too.

airush geoff
974 posts
24 May 2009 10:16AM
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Love the mandies....tried dragonfruit the other week and I really like that too.

Mark _australia
WA, 23746 posts
24 May 2009 10:39AM
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Probably Julian Clary, he's quite funny

cisco
QLD, 12365 posts
24 May 2009 2:44PM
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easty said...

Coming from Tassie, I love mangoes and bananas! Favourite would be a particular custard apple I had in Cooktown once - still remember the taste. Apricots from my tree are pretty tasty too.


That would have been a "sour sop". We had a big one at Cedar Bay (just south of Cooktown) and it took three of us a couple of days to eat it. Yummm.

firiebob
WA, 3183 posts
24 May 2009 1:49PM
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Mangoes and bananas But most fresh fruit really including tomatoes straight off the vine

noels
WA, 93 posts
24 May 2009 2:27PM
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I love watermelon, rockmelon (with ice cream) and bananas. Yum

sausage
QLD, 4874 posts
24 May 2009 4:28PM
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There's only one thing better than eating a mandarine............and that's licking amanda out.

Apologies for being so crude

easty
TAS, 2213 posts
24 May 2009 7:46PM
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cisco said...

easty said...

Coming from Tassie, I love mangoes and bananas! Favourite would be a particular custard apple I had in Cooktown once - still remember the taste. Apricots from my tree are pretty tasty too.


That would have been a "sour sop". We had a big one at Cedar Bay (just south of Cooktown) and it took three of us a couple of days to eat it. Yummm.




You lived at Cedar Bay? I stayed there twice when kayaking past, in '91 and '94 - there were the remains of gardens still there, plenty of starfruit from memory. And pigs.
Nice place!




windykid
QLD, 368 posts
24 May 2009 8:35PM
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mmmm.... mangos

cisco
QLD, 12365 posts
24 May 2009 11:10PM
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easty said...

cisco said...

easty said...

Coming from Tassie, I love mangoes and bananas! Favourite would be a particular custard apple I had in Cooktown once - still remember the taste. Apricots from my tree are pretty tasty too.

That would have been a "sour sop". We had a big one at Cedar Bay (just south of Cooktown) and it took three of us a couple of days to eat it. Yummm.


You lived at Cedar Bay? I stayed there twice when kayaking past, in '91 and '94 - there were the remains of gardens still there, plenty of starfruit from memory. And pigs.
Nice place!


I didn't live there. I visited there for a week in 1974. At the time the place was a grazing lease attached to a tin mining lease up in the hills for grazing the "collier ponies" used in the mine.

The lease was owned by a character known as "Cedar Bay Bill". He had a shack at the northern end of the bay with surrounding gardens. When I visited in 1974 he was in his 80s and had been there for 40 odd years. I visited and chatted with him one day and found him to be quite pleasant and very lucid. By then he had retired from mining activities and spent most of his time reading. He would take his boat up to Cooktown now and then to pick up his pension money and buy a few supplies.

A friend in Mt Isa recommended I go and see the place. At the time there were also several " hippie communes " at the bay. Then at the age of 24 and an ex R.A.N. sailor, I was in search of free love and free dope and a place to veg out.

The police in Cairns would raid the place fairly regularly with the cost of a raid about $24,000 which would nett about $2,400 in fines which were hardly ever paid anyway.

Old Bill really loved the place and was being pestered by the hippies for him to sign the lease over to them before he died. Bill told me that he thought it would be better if he signed over to the national parks. He did this in the mistaken belief that national parks would take better care of the place than the hippies.

Back then there was a line of coconut palms from one end of the beach to the other the seeds of which must have been carried there by a cyclone originating in the Solomons many years before.

From your photo it looks like it is very much overgrown from when I was there. Bill told me that when he first was there the plain of the bay was all open savannah country and the jungle was only up in the hills.

National parks in their ignorance said "They are not native." and I believe removed them all along with all of the tropical fruit trees Bill had cultivated around his shack.

There were no pigs in the bay then either. They had to be hunted up in the hills. It is not only the pigs, cats and dogs that have gone feral up that way. There are heaps of feral humans up there too. C'est la vie.

It really is a beautiful place and if national parks had any brains they would build access to it and manage it as a camping paradise but now that they have let crocodiles breed out of all proportion, it is probably not a good idea. I would be very wary of kayaking around that country.
Cheers Cisco

easty
TAS, 2213 posts
25 May 2009 12:16AM
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^^^ Thanks for that Cisco - there were a few "alternative lifestylers" living there when we stayed in '91, they told us about the police raids in the good old days. In '94 there was no-one there, but a dude sailed up from Cairns to hunt some pigs - we had an awesome meal on the beach with him. (we were living on fish, so some spit roasted pork went down well!) We also stumbled across the grave of Cedar Bay Bill - didn't know his story but bet he's stoked to be resting in his favourite place.

poor relative
WA, 9106 posts
24 May 2009 11:48PM
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Were the mangos good?

cisco
QLD, 12365 posts
25 May 2009 4:45AM
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Not as good as the sour sop. I think the mangoes at Cooktown are stringy turpentines. I know they are stringy. I'm still trying to get the last of it out from between my teeth.

j murray
SA, 947 posts
25 May 2009 4:31AM
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memories........, sailed/roared/surfed into the bay also 1981 2 Caper Cats 14' on way to Thursday island. Story in Australasian Post. On a wave and a prayer 30knt south easterly's, absolutely knackered.
Made big seafaring mistake, anchored boats close inshore and collapsed for night in spooky old shack. It blew and it blew then at picininny dawn ...no boats. Eventually found them, a couple o mile away. Chafed thru the anchor ropes and skedattled. Retrieved, but damaged enough to call rest of trip off. Who knows, may have saved our lives.
Not long after sailboarder went missing between tip and TI. Put that one down to a lesson well learned.
Met some 303 totin spaced out hippy, friendly buuuuuuut

cisco
QLD, 12365 posts
25 May 2009 7:35PM
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There are certainly some wierd ones up in that country Joe.

poor relative
WA, 9106 posts
25 May 2009 6:04PM
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cisco said...

There are certainly some wierd ones up in that country Joe.


I enjoy QLD mangos. Delicious
Nothing wierd about juicy and sweet
Bit like greenie really who is also juicy and sweet.

myusernam
QLD, 6160 posts
25 May 2009 9:26PM
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poor relative said...

cisco said...

There are certainly some wierd ones up in that country Joe.


I enjoy QLD mangos. Delicious
Nothing wierd about juicy and sweet
Bit like greenie really


No one's said forbidden fruit!

mangoes are noice. But Have too many each year. any of you wa guys want to trade? I'll send you a box of bowen mangoes for some excess margaret river vintage! Work pays for the freight!

poor relative
WA, 9106 posts
26 May 2009 8:05AM
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I love mangos

This year i gormandised a whole tray and felt super spewy afterwards
My wife was aghast at my gluttony

Here is some more mango porn


poor relative
WA, 9106 posts
26 May 2009 8:08AM
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and some more peach porn

king of the point
WA, 1836 posts
26 May 2009 1:50PM
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your VERY poor relatives

poor relative
WA, 9106 posts
26 May 2009 2:01PM
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watermelon porn

landyacht
WA, 5921 posts
26 May 2009 8:31PM
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OOOOH ,that mango porn did it for me

colinwill78
VIC, 1395 posts
28 May 2009 9:56PM
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Dragon fruit,
its from a cactus thing. Red and white available. delicious!
outside spiky looking, inside looks like a kiwifruit that has been blended and packed back in. eat with spoon!

Try one of each today
some like red others like white.

colinwill78
VIC, 1395 posts
28 May 2009 9:57PM
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fruit of thy womb
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lame

cisco
QLD, 12365 posts
28 May 2009 11:43PM
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Really ripe mulberries that stain your fingers, lips and white shirt deep purple. They are also good with fresh cream.



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Forums > General Discussion   Shooting the breeze...


"Favourite fruit" started by poor relative