Forty minutes north of Perth, off Wattle Avenue, an orchard runs against the grain of Western Australia's citrus-and-stonefruit country by growing Bowen and Kensington Pride mangoes. The fruit is left on the branch to ripen fully rather than picked green for transport, and the trees go untreated with pesticides or insecticides. Visitors are handed gloves and a picking stick, pay $10 entry (children under ten $5), then $15 a kilo for what they carry back to the scales. The season is short, typically early March into April, and the farm opens only Wednesdays, Fridays and weekends while fruit lasts, closing early on any day it sells out. It runs without a website, its opening days confirmed instead through Facebook as the crop ripens. A modest, family-run stop rather than a polished agritourism venue, and a rare chance to pick mangoes well south of where most people expect to find them.