Vietnam's three-coloured mangos exported to Australia
The Mekong Delta province of An Giang has exported 5.4 tonnes of three-coloured mangos to Australia for the first time.
The mango skin changes from green to reddish purple and then yellow when it ripens, so locals have named it the "mango of three colours."
With seeds being imported from Taiwan, this mango variety has become increasingly popular in the Mekong Delta region over the years due to its large size, pretty colours and pleasant taste.
The trees grow well, flowering easily and bearing fruit 18 months after being planted. Each mango weighs between 450g and 700g on average, with the largest ones reaching nearly two kilos.
Deputy Director of An Giang Department of Agriculture and Rural Development Nguyen Si Lam said the province had cooperated with the Chanh Thu Im-export Company in the Mekong Delta province of Ben Tre since early April to select mango growing gardens in Cho Moi district, which grow the fruit under VietGAP standards.
The department has also coordinated with a local plant quarantine centre to check quality and issue codes for growing gardens, which are qualified for exports to Australia and the US, said Lam.
The province hopes to begin exporting mangos to the US soon, he added.
Cho Moi district has become the hub of three-coloured mangos after the provincial People’s Committee approved financial support for project on building an area dedicated to the fruit several years ago. The fruit is being grown in nearly 5,000ha, mainly in the My Hiep, Binh Phuoc Xuan, and Tan My communes.
According to Nguyen Phuoc Thanh, an official of the An Giang Plant Protection and Cultivation Agency, about 730 growing households had been trained produce high quality mangoes. Local authorities had set up a chain from supply to consumption with participation of growers and businesses.
Three-coloured mango. Photo: vnexpress
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The trees grow well, flowering easily and bearing fruit 18 months after being planted. Each mango weighs between 450g and 700g on average, with the largest ones reaching nearly two kilos.
Deputy Director of An Giang Department of Agriculture and Rural Development Nguyen Si Lam said the province had cooperated with the Chanh Thu Im-export Company in the Mekong Delta province of Ben Tre since early April to select mango growing gardens in Cho Moi district, which grow the fruit under VietGAP standards.
The department has also coordinated with a local plant quarantine centre to check quality and issue codes for growing gardens, which are qualified for exports to Australia and the US, said Lam.
The province hopes to begin exporting mangos to the US soon, he added.
Cho Moi district has become the hub of three-coloured mangos after the provincial People’s Committee approved financial support for project on building an area dedicated to the fruit several years ago. The fruit is being grown in nearly 5,000ha, mainly in the My Hiep, Binh Phuoc Xuan, and Tan My communes.
According to Nguyen Phuoc Thanh, an official of the An Giang Plant Protection and Cultivation Agency, about 730 growing households had been trained produce high quality mangoes. Local authorities had set up a chain from supply to consumption with participation of growers and businesses.
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