Kaleem Ullah Khan, known as the 'Mango Man of India,' has revolutionized horticulture by grafting over 300 mango varieties onto a 120-year-old tree in Uttar Pradesh. Despite limited formal education, ...
India's fruit trees are under threat, but a community of gardeners is using an old trick to save them – and even bring some back from the dead. It can take an entire village to grow a new-age garden.
With 300 types of mangos to his horticultural credit, Kaleem Ullah Khan is quick to tell anyone in India and beyond about the infinite potential of the fruit and its tree, including as medicine. By ...
Kaleem Ullah Khan's skills have won him numerous accolades in India and abroad Kaleem Ullah Khan, locally known as the Mango Man , shows how he grafts different varieties of mangoes on a 100-year-old ...
The legacy of the Tiger of Mysore lives on not only in monuments and manuscripts, it can also be sensed in the living presence of two ancient mango trees in the Lalbagh botanical gardens, believed to ...
I had a caller ask about his mango tree. He said that one side of his tree was fruited and the other side was barren. I thought about this for a long time and decided that he had a Vainer tree and ...
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