I actually have an avo tree taller than me that I started this way 10 or so years ago. It is in a pot, and our climate is a bit cold for them, so I move it into the house in winter.
These are normally outside, just hiding from the worst of the winter.
Note for those interested in trying this as well:
Avocados do not breed true - you will not get a tree producing the same quality of fruit that you planted. It will be some completely random type of avocado
and it’s extremely rare that these end up anything besides inedible.If you’re looking for a pretty tree: go for it.
Edit: based on further information it seems that you’ll likely get an edible avocado but it will have any number of random mutations from the original. In the video shown below it was mostly seed with very little flesh, for example.
If you want good avocados buy a $20 seedling and guarantee that you’re getting quality.
You can graft branches from good producers onto your plant.
Not sure where to source the grafts though
Generally you just buy a tree pre-grafted. They’re usually grafting onto heartier root stock to begin with.
The only reason I know what your talking about is because I was just watching a thing on apples about this subject.
It’s true of most fruit trees as I understand it.
And a bunch of veggies too. Peppers are notorious for cross breeding.
Peppers are fruits! In botanical terms anyway.
Vegetable is a culinary term not a botanical one.
Cross breeding yes - but you usually have edible peppers from the crosses.
Crabapples are what you get when you plant apple seeds. Nearly inedible when compared to the fruit it came from.
This info gets repeated quite often, but when you talk to people who have gotten fruit from seed-grown avocado trees they usually say that the fruit is good.
See this video and its comment section: https://youtu.be/anUdo8tZlh0
Huh: I guess I was wrong.
At the same time the avocado he opened there had barely any flesh. It was mostly seed.
I’m not convinced that it’s worth the effort of 6+ years of growing the tree to have fruit that is inferior to a seedling you could get for $20.
I wouldn’t consider your statement wrong, but maybe just a tad bit too pessimistic. I don’t know the numbers, my point was more on the matter that - based on my readings - the chances of getting decent fruit are not too bad.
Like another commenter said: worst case you can graft a good variety onto your seedling so that you’ll get good fruit no matter your luck.