The Weavers: Tropical fruit moguls

The several hundred trees on the Weavers’s farm are all healthy and heavy-bearing, like this Keitt mango. (Diana Duff/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Susie proudly displays a sampling of their dragon fruit that will go into their fresh fruit cups. (Diana Duff/Special to West Hawaii Today)

In an attempt to reduce bird damage to their dragon fruit, the Weavers are covering plants with netting. (Diana Duff/Special to West Hawaii Today)

When they added acreage to their farm in 2000, the Weavers began growing dragon fruit varieties that were well-suited to their location. (Diana Duff/Special to West Hawaii Today)

When they added acreage to their farm in 2000, the Weavers began growing dragon fruit varieties that were well-suited to their location. (Diana Duff/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Susie’s joy in her work is evident as she shows off one of her beautiful, large mangos. (Diana Duff/Special to West Hawaii Today)

The large warehouse on the Weavers’s farm houses washing, sorting and packing stations as well as a commercial kitchen for preparing dried fruit and fresh fruit cups. (Diana Duff/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Susie occasionally joins Terry in the field during the dragon fruit harvest. (Photos by DIana Duff/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Bee Hoist and Shannon Mullins help in the warehouse washing and sorting mangos. (Diana Duff/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Susie loves sharing her fruit with friends in the community, like fruit-lover Shafer Santiago-Militão, who stopped by for a visit. (Diana Duff/Special to West Hawaii Today)
One of Amparo Magana's jobs in the Weaver warehouse is polishing the mangos before boxing. (Diana Duff/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Susie and Terry Weaver met by chance at a party in Northern California in the early 1970s.