A timely lesson in the flowers…..
By now, we all know that during any mango season, the weeks between when the trees flower and when they begin to set fruit and formation are critical in determining crop outlooks. For the Mexican season, this window runs from now through early January, with particular emphasis on those first weeks of January—when harsh weather and the infamous La Ventosa winds are most likely. These cold winds can knock larger, formed fruit to the ground, potentially impacting the crop. Until the season formally begins, we move forward with the information at hand, assessing, hypothesizing, and, in many ways, simply hoping for the best, while maintaining good orchard care.
Despite the cold settling around me here in Northern California, news of mango blooms beginning to blanket southern Mexico sets mango flowers on the top of my mind. Mango blossoms are a gorgeous signal of possibility, filling us with hope and promise—that’s what I love about the onset of the Mexican mango season. The way we must be hopeful. Less than 1% of mango blooms will actually form fruit, and while no one knows which ones will make it, the sheer abundance gives an illusion of endless potential: each flower might become a luscious, juicy mango. Seeing millions of these dazzling blooms burst from the trees like fireworks, how can we not feel hopeful?