Avocado flowers grow in terminal panicles or clusters composed of 200 to 300 small, yellowish-green flowers. Flower bloom time is between January and March. The trees also bloom off season during the year and these flowers occasionally also set fruit. Certain varieties of avocado only bloom and produce fruit during alternate years.
Each avocado flower is classified as perfect and consists of the male and female parts. Flowers measure about ½-inch-deep and ½-inch wide. An ovary is contained in the single pistil. There is also a stigma and an elongated style in the pistil. There are nine stamens around the stamens. The nectar and pollen produced by the flowers attract bees.
Avocado trees are best adapted to regions with mild winters and are tolerant of temperature between 24 to 19 degrees F. Fruit production is best in a full-sun site. The trees thrive in loose, well-drained, sandy loam and adapt to acidic or alkaline soils. Avoid poorly drained sites. Plant in an open site that will give the tree plenty of room to grow easily. If growing in containers, do not use plastic.
Evergreen avocado trees are fast growing and have a mature height of up to 80 feet. The dense branches spread wide to create a broad crown. The tree produces frequent growth flushes in areas with extended warm weather condition. In cooler areas, growth is limited to a long flush per year. It takes a grafted tree one to two years to produce fruits. Seed propagated trees become productive in eight to 20 years.