The Northern Advocate

‘Rare’ heart-shaped feijoa attracts $100 offer online

- Karina Cooper

An uncommon heart-shaped feijoa found in a Whangārei couple’s backyard has attracted a $100 offer after a Northland woman listed it for sale.

Anna Wainwright, 25, was collecting feijoas off the ground at her grandparen­ts’ place when she looked up and saw something that made her go: “What the heck.”

In front of her, still hanging on the tree, was a heart-shaped feijoa.

“I’d never seen one like that before,” Wainwright said.

The self-confessed feijoa fan decided to save the “weird” fruit from scavengers by placing a mesh bag underneath to catch it when it fell. Once that happened, she took it home and thought she would list it on Facebook Marketplac­e for a bit of a laugh.

Up went a photo alongside an $80 price tag and a warning to bargain hunters.

“Price is negotiable but no low ballers I know what I’ve got,” Wainwright wrote.

She told the Advocate she didn’t think she’d get much interest.

But Wainwright was wrong. Messages started pouring in within an hour of the listing being posted.

People said she had made their day, others asked if she was serious.

“There was a lot of interest,” Wainwright said.

Buyers put forward offers ranging from $40 to $100. Wainwright replied to the top-dollar propositio­n but was yet to hear back.

She had no plans for any money potentiall­y made but did have a fall-back plan if the feijoa didn’t sell. “Yeah, I’ll definitely eat it. It’s in the fridge but I’m not sure how long it will last.”

Dr Janice Lord, associate professor of the University of Otago’s botany department, said the fusing of fruit was uncommon, but Googling of “fused fruit” would bring up an array of weird fruits that had to grown into two rather than one.

Such a phenomenon happens at the start of the fruit’s developmen­t when a bud starts to become a flower.

“Normally the cells are organised and they’ll start developing into one flower,” Lord said.

“Something like a virus, a bit of damage, or even cold stress — something has happened to the cellular developmen­t so two flowers have developed where there should’ve been one.” Both flowers produce fruit.

Lord hadn’t seen a dual feijoa before — mostly because she is Dunedin-based where feijoas don’t thrive as much as in the North.

While a potential sale was pending, Wainwright was waiting for another interestin­g feijoa to fall from the same tree.

“This one looks like a butt.”

 ?? ?? The “rare” heart-shaped feijoa listed for sale by Northlande­r Anna Wainwright.
The “rare” heart-shaped feijoa listed for sale by Northlande­r Anna Wainwright.

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