K I love your specific variety videos, but I gotta say that my favorite part is that taste tester at the end. 😄❤️🐕 Please please please always include Dale! 😄
Great video as always.. I live in Concord, NC and was just wondering how many days of hang time is the usual for your Ronde de Bordeaux? Thanks in advance and keep up the great work.
Just so I understand...Did you say that tree grew to its current size (6-8 ft. it looks) from a cutting in just 7 or 8 months? I can't get growth anything like that on my container trees. But I have watched all your fertilizing videos and will follow closely next spring.
I have a new RDB that was gifted to me a month ago. It was very small when I got it but it's grown so well. I'm super excited to get fruit from it next year. My kadota is producting well here in NJ and my CH that died back to the ground over the winter is 4' tall and loaded with fruit. My first good year with figs. RDB and CH are going into the garage here this winter.
I purchased a fig and forgot what variety it is. I've had it 4 years and NO fruit ever. It's about 5 feet tall. The leaf looks almost identical to your Ronde de Bordeaux. I have 6-7 Brown Turkey cutting that are now 4 feet and they all produced w/in 1-2 years. Leaves and plant are healthy. I don't have a sprinkler system, so only natural rain. I wish I could upload a pic to help with the identification. Any ideas why it's not producing?
4 года назад
I have many fruits this year...first time tree has fruited. They showed up early July (Boston area)....great color, plenty of fruit. But they are small (size of a nickel) and seem to have 'stalled'...no swelling, same size for 3+ weeks. Am I just being impatient? Or is something stalling them?
The Millennial Gardener It is a year old and only about 2 ft tall. This was it’s very first fig. It was in a 2 gallon pot until 2 weeks ago when I up-potted it to 7 gallon grow bag
Zone 7A Tennessee have to brown turkey figs one 3 years old one purchased this spring love the dog just lost my baby girl of 16 years to kidney failure thanks for the advice
Enjoyed your video, just a quick question. Is it to late to pinch my black mission fig as I live in California in the Central Valley? I just bought it a month ago, it has no limbs, just a straight tree style nearly 5’. Thanks so much! Completely new at this, first time growing
Thank you. How long is your growing season? If no figlets have formed yet, it is probably too late to try because even if you have late frosts, any figs that ripen will ripen under too cool of temperatures to develop sugars. This late in the year, I would work on shaping your fig tree to the desired form. If you pinch, it will stop the growth and cause branching at the pinch-point. That could mess up your shape if you desire a certain shape. I would spend this season growing it out and shoot for fruit next year.
Quick question. I got 4” pot figs from Hirts. I put in 1 gallon pots. Zone 6a/b. I plan to bring in over winter. Should I put under lights and grow or allow to go dormant?
Allow them to go dormant. Figs need to drop their leaves and overwinter. Trying to keep them in a growth phase is unnatural. The only things you want to put under lights in your zone are fig cuttings you're trying to root over the winter once you see the first couple roots take hold.
Different, but similar…if that makes sense 😂 They have a similar background flavor, but I am able to ripen Ronde de Bordeaux better in my climate. VdB struggles more in my weather.
Wondering about watering potted figs - I have 2, a Louisiana Gold (?) and VdB. Both get late afternoon sun against a wall. They seem pretty heat-stressed for about an hour each afternoon unless I water them well each a.m. They bounce back. If figs love a hot, dry climate, does the wilting show they are too dry or is it normal? Of course my figs in the ground never wilt unless we have severe drought. Thanks!
In the fig's native climate (the Mediterranean), the climate is hot and try, yes, but their soil is very rich in limestone deposits. That's why when you see those beautiful beaches in Italy and Greece, it's almost like they're built on rock shelves. There are limestone bights all over the Mediterranean. Those limestone pockets absorb moisture all year long, and figs have GIGANTIC, spider-like root systems, so they actually seek out those limestone pockets and feed off the moisture the rocks contain throughout the season. While the climate itself is bone dry June 1 - September 1, the figs and their adventurous root systems find those moisture pockets. This is why figs respond so well to high phosphorous fertilizers and garden lime, by the way. It's why I give them heavy treatments of bone meal, which is similar to garden lime, but I believe more nutritive. There is a common misconception that "drought tolerant" trees will do well in dry containers. That's not true. If any container dries out, the tree will become injured, and if the container dries out for too long, the tree will die. In nature, "drought tolerant" trees just have adventurous, spidering root systems that better seek moisture, or they have some type of internal water storage system (like cacti). This can't happen in a container since the roots are completely restricted, so all trees planted in containers need to have their moisture levels constantly monitored. Figs use absurd amounts of water in the heat of the summer, so keeping the container trees well-irrigated is a must. As you mentioned, the in-ground fig trees are fine for the reasons I outlined above. I would suggest putting them in larger containers. If you can get large self-watering containers with a reservoir in the bottom, they're REALLY good. They're not cheap, but they work very well.
Well, from what I've seen, every fig grows well in California. They have perfectly dry Mediterranean summers, so I would anticipate any fig to do better your way than mine.
I rooted a RdB this spring but none of my plants look anything like yours. I need to study your fertilizer plan although it may be the small containers they are in. I would be interested in your thoughts for a varieties that would DE well just slightly colder then you are?
I might need to look into getting a Ronde de Bordeaux. I'm trying to find some later producing figs since my tree, I believe it's a brown turkey, produces from late June to August then kinda fizzles out and it becomes more of a struggle to get some figs that the birds haven't gotten. I'm also wondering if I can find a fig that is even earlier producing? Maybe even starting in mid to early June??
A Ronde de Bordeaux will produce earlier than a California Brown Turkey (if that's what you mean by Brown Turkey - there are so many "brown turkey" varieties anymore). It is also far better tasting, in my opinion, albeit 1/3 of the size. If you want a later fig that is OUTSTANDING, look into Col de Dame Blanc and Col de Dame Gegantina. They are absolutely fantastic. Two other good choices are Black Madeira and Martinenca Rimada. They are very late figs.
Jacob Simpson word of warning, in my climate, it was a monster splitter last year. It got killed to the base last year, so it is way behind, and I may not see if it repeats the splitting habit.
They're mostly gone. I ripped every single one except for 4 out in July. They are infertile here except for the cherry types and very small types, so that's why I pulled 36 out of 40. The handful that still were producing a couple got ripped up by the storm, so I'll probably pull them today.
RdB is much earlier, so it'll probably fare better in your climate. Both are very common. I think I got cuttings from Big Bill last winter for like $5 each.
The same thing about me being a friend and I'm not going anywhere but u are really good at work and don't have to do anything for my family or friends who have a lot of time for their life or anything else and I don't want a friend who is just want to talk about how they feel and what they want and I have to go to work and get some sleep.
I offer cuttings during the dormant season in January, and I always announce when they're available. If you want a tree at this moment, you can check Figbid.