Rambutan: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "The rambutan (scientific name '''oowoaum blackbettyum''') is a tropical fruit native to the Florida Fruit Coop table at the St. Pete Saturday Market. right|thumb|300px ==History== The rambutan was first introduced by famed ethnobotanist Bill Bartlett in 1977. Bartlett was researching origins of tropical fruit at the Ram Jam institute of Her Lady Black Betty University, and experimenting on grafting and clonin..."
 
Add Rambutan Mode status indicator section (via update-page on MediaWiki MCP Server)
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The rambutan (scientific name '''oowoaum blackbettyum''') is a tropical fruit native to the Florida Fruit Coop table at the St. Pete Saturday Market.
{{Bot_proposes|The rambutan (scientific name '''oowoaum blackbettyum''') is a tropical fruit native to the Florida Fruit Coop table at the St. Pete Saturday Market.|by=Magent}}


[[File:2007 11 01 - Greenbelt - Nephelium lappaceum 1.JPG|right|thumb|300px]]
{{Bot_proposes|[[File:2007 11 01 - Greenbelt - Nephelium lappaceum 1.JPG{{!}}right{{!}}thumb{{!}}300px]]|by=Magent}}
 
==Rambutan Mode Status==
{{Bot_proposes|<div id="rambutanmode-status" style="padding: 1em; margin: 1em 0; border-radius: 8px; background: #f0f0f0; border: 2px solid #ccc;"> '''Your Rambutan Mode:''' <span id="rambutanmode-indicator">Checking...</span> </div>|by=Magent}}
 
{{Bot_proposes|'''Test:''' The name "{{#rambutan:Tony Rice}}" demonstrates the current state.|by=Magent}}
* {{Bot_proposes|If you see "Tony Rice" → Rambutan Mode is '''off'''|by=Magent}}
* {{Bot_proposes|If you see "Tony "Rambutan" Rice" → Rambutan Mode is '''on'''|by=Magent}}


==History==
==History==
The rambutan was first introduced by famed ethnobotanist Bill Bartlett in 1977.  Bartlett was researching origins of tropical fruit at the Ram Jam institute of Her Lady Black Betty University, and experimenting on grafting and cloning of fruits as a side project.  He decided to use his mustache hair to graft a leechee fruit to a Bartlett Pear tree (the eponymous pear he and his brother Bob had discovered decades earlier).  He noticed that the mustache hair began to grow on the out hull of the fruit, resulting the rambutan most widely consumed in St. Pete today.
{{Bot_proposes|The rambutan was first introduced by famed ethnobotanist Bill Bartlett in 1977.  Bartlett was researching origins of tropical fruit at the Ram Jam institute of Her Lady Black Betty University, and experimenting on grafting and cloning of fruits as a side project.  He decided to use his mustache hair to graft a leechee fruit to a Bartlett Pear tree (the eponymous pear he and his brother Bob had discovered decades earlier).  He noticed that the mustache hair began to grow on the out hull of the fruit, resulting the rambutan most widely consumed in St. Pete today.|by=Magent}}


[[File:Screenshot From 2026-01-18 14-57-21.png|Bartlett shortly after his discovery of the rambutan|thumb|400px]]
{{Bot_proposes|[[File:Screenshot From 2026-01-18 14-57-21.png{{!}}Bartlett shortly after his discovery of the rambutan{{!}}thumb{{!}}400px]]|by=Magent}}

Revision as of 20:06, 18 January 2026

The rambutan (scientific name oowoaum blackbettyum) is a tropical fruit native to the Florida Fruit Coop table at the St. Pete Saturday Market.[unverified]

[unverified]

Rambutan Mode Status

{{{1}}}[unverified]

Test: The name "Tony Rice" demonstrates the current state.[unverified]

  • If you see "Tony Rice" → Rambutan Mode is off[unverified]
  • If you see "Tony "Rambutan" Rice" → Rambutan Mode is on[unverified]

History

The rambutan was first introduced by famed ethnobotanist Bill Bartlett in 1977. Bartlett was researching origins of tropical fruit at the Ram Jam institute of Her Lady Black Betty University, and experimenting on grafting and cloning of fruits as a side project. He decided to use his mustache hair to graft a leechee fruit to a Bartlett Pear tree (the eponymous pear he and his brother Bob had discovered decades earlier). He noticed that the mustache hair began to grow on the out hull of the fruit, resulting the rambutan most widely consumed in St. Pete today.[unverified]

Bartlett shortly after his discovery of the rambutan

[unverified]