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First to plant many exotic fruits in U.S.

OBITUARIES
Paul Thomson, 1916 - 2008

June 15, 2008|Valerie J. Nelson, Times Staff Writer
  • Paul Thomson
    Lynn Maxson

Paul Thomson, a self-taught botanist who co-founded the California Rare Fruit Growers organization and helped expand exotic fruit-growing in the state, has died. He was 91.

Thomson died May 31 of complications related to old age at a Fallbrook retirement home, said Patti Humphreys, a friend.

Two years after John Riley, a Lockheed Martin engineer from Santa Clara, sought out Thomson's advice, the pair founded the fruit growers group in 1968 as a clearinghouse for exotic plant enthusiasts. The organization of amateur horticulturists now has more than 3,000 members in about 35 countries.


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The region was ripe for new ideas at the time because newcomers were piling into California in the late 1960s "without prejudice to what could not be grown here," according to an association history.

The group played a major role in promoting many once-rare fruits that have become widely available at farmers markets throughout Southern California, the online newsletter Seasonal Chef reported in 1997.

Thomson was "the driving force" behind a movement to change what could be grown here, the newsletter said.

The child of missionaries, Thomson developed a taste for mangoes while growing up in India. When he landed in San Diego in the 1950s near the end of his 20-year career in the Marines, he experimented on five acres in Bonsall, east of Oceanside, with growing fruit usually found in warmer climes.

He planted the Chinese litchi and longan fruits, papayas, mangoes and any other tropical and subtropical fruit he could find. For the most part, he failed spectacularly, done in by freezing and fluctuating temperatures.

"Everybody told me I was crazy," Thomson told the San Diego Union-Tribune in 1989. "Well, that's when you put your back to the wall and prove otherwise."

In 1962, he bought a second small farm in Vista, which was a little more than five miles away but had a milder and more hospitable climate.

Between his two small orchards, he planted 96 types of fruit not usually grown in the United States, The Times reported in 1971.

He produced the first mamey -- commonly known as a South American apricot -- of record in California and had the only longan orchard in the U.S. at the time.

"I was 20 years ahead of my time," Thomson said in the Union-Tribune in 1989. "I never made enough to pay the water bill, let alone make any money."

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