We are getting so close to the release countdown of our Sea Grape Inspired Graphic-T Collection! Keep an eye out over the 𝐧𝐞𝐱𝐭 𝐟𝐞𝐰 𝐝𝐚𝐲𝐬! . On one final skim for interesting sea grape facts, we were surprised to discover another Caribbean-based appreciator/endorser of the sea grape plant! @uncommoncarib , hailing from Saint Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands, who wrote an article 9 years ago about the same plant & its edibility. We think an excerpt from their article will perfectly complement this next set of photographs from our sea grape project. . “It all starts around late Spring. Around this time, you’ll begin to see clusters of white, aromatic flowers begin to appear on long stalks. These can be around a foot long. Sea grape trees are what they call ‘dioecious’, meaning that there are separate male and female plants. So, the only way for them to get pollinated is from a different sea grape tree. Of course, our Caribbean bees are more than up to the task. Before you know it (around in mid-Summer), those clusters of white flowers have turned into little bunches of green grape-like clusters” (Sea Grapes: Feel Free to Savor This Taste of the Caribbean, Steve Bennett, 2012).










