Topics

95% if not all fig tree died in Queens NY. Disaster

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ekierk
Some might not be dead because the fig trees are taking a long time to break dormancy.

that's true, and plus it looks that we are having a late summer here in Queens NY

Don't lose hope yet.  I was getting ready to toss one of my potted figs that I left outside too long.  It had been in the greenhouse for 2 months and looked totally dead.  Last week I noticed some little green sprouts and it is coming back.

I am predicting a lot of rain this summer. the weather have changed a lot these days



a 15 year old tree with a foot wide trunk died

Mature trees with a healthy root structure planted where the ground was snow covered or next to a warm foundation will probably grow out again from the ground even if the trunk and branches were killed by the cold.

Hang in there guys.  I am in 7b and my winter protected 6-7 year old trees all died back to the ground this year.  If that was not bad enough, the new Carolina beetle plague has attacked the dead trunks.  Have cut all back to the ground. Just in the last week or so I am starting to see new shoots appearing from underground nodes.  We warm up a lot earlier than you do although later than Joe in Athens so all may not be lost yet...just taking forever. Hope, patience and Good luck.

wrapped_fig_tree.jpg It still works in the 5 boroughs, North Jersey and Connecticut.  Note grape vine shading the car.   :-)


Quote:
Originally Posted by coop951
Here is the Dominick tree that I cut over 500 cuttings and sent out to the group last November. I thought that if he died this year that it would be fitting. He was around long enough to send fig love to over 70 fig peeps.  No protection and as usual died to the ground. There is life however and he just never gives up. 
There is hope folks. I will update during the summer
dombefore1.JPG 
dombefore2.JPG 

The Dominick Tree is Jersey Strong. 

Great picture, Joe.

7 out of 9 in-ground trees are coming back to life in zone 7a.  These were all unprotected and just 1 year since planted in the ground with the exception of a 3 year old tree.  The other two may still come back to life.  Top growth is dead on all of them though.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joe_Athens1945
wrapped_fig_tree.jpg It still works in the 5 boroughs, North Jersey and Connecticut.  Note grape vine shading the car.   :-)
what did you use to wrap it? did you put anything inside?

George,
I recently pruned several large trees (5) in The Bronx and they did have extensive damage, even on 1" and larger limbs, but 2" and larger limbs and trunks are still alive, with green cambium layers. Several of the 1" - 2" limbs actually were dead on 1/2 of the entire length ( 1/2 lengthwise had brown, dead cambium).

Most of this damage occurred after the cold spell in February. I have pictures of healthy limbs on these trees at the end of January, but brown, dead limbs on the same trees in early March. 

Pete,
  I've seen that same kind of lengthwise 1/2-dead 1/2-live effect twice now.  One was on some cuttings I received from forum member. The other was from some cuttings I just picked up from the roadside here in Central NJ.  The tree was wrapped (though not well) and reasonably well protected from wind behind a garage in a tree-filled suburban back yard.  I think the owner just cut everything to the ground to start fresh.  Most of the branches I collected will turn out to be dead, but there was a hint of green at the bottom of 1 or 2 of them. 
  Yesterday I talked to a nursery owner with lots of relatives in the Chambersburg section of Trenton, NJ -- an area rich with Italian heritage.  His relatives are all reporting dieback down to the ground on their unprotected trees.  (...no mention of protected ones.)

  I just hope people don't start yanking them out prematurely...
Jim

I can vouch that there are many others off the forum who've suffered a loss too. Last week I was at Queens Garden Center in Whitestone off the cross island. The owner and I were talking, he told me that he has gotten dozens of calls from people asking if he had any trees for sale because they've all been lost. He said he's never seem a winter with so much fig damage.

I actually did take a few cuttings from a local tree on May 2nd, no leaves.. Nothing and the tree appeared dead, but I thought what the hell I might as well try and root it... Rooted within days in a ziplock bag! Yet the tree still looks dead... So I suspect those who are predicting that the trees are just taking a snooze may be right!'

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joeturbo26
I can vouch that there are many others off the forum who've suffered a loss too. Last week I was at Queens Garden Center in Whitestone off the cross island. The owner and I were talking, he told me that he has gotten dozens of calls from people asking if he had any trees for sale because they've all been lost. He said he's never seem a winter with so much fig damage.

I actually did take a few cuttings from a local tree on May 2nd, no leaves.. Nothing and the tree appeared dead, but I thought what the hell I might as well try and root it... Rooted within days in a ziplock bag! Yet the tree still looks dead... So I suspect those who are predicting that the trees are just taking a snooze may be right!'


that's where I live too,in Whitestone , I went to that nursery lol.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Figs4Life
Quote:
Originally Posted by Joeturbo26
I can vouch that there are many others off the forum who've suffered a loss too. Last week I was at Queens Garden Center in Whitestone off the cross island. The owner and I were talking, he told me that he has gotten dozens of calls from people asking if he had any trees for sale because they've all been lost. He said he's never seem a winter with so much fig damage.

I actually did take a few cuttings from a local tree on May 2nd, no leaves.. Nothing and the tree appeared dead, but I thought what the hell I might as well try and root it... Rooted within days in a ziplock bag! Yet the tree still looks dead... So I suspect those who are predicting that the trees are just taking a snooze may be right!'


that's where I live too,in Whitestone , I went to that nursery lol.


Lol.... Did you see the guys lawn behind A&S on 23rd Ave & 163rd St? His lawn is greener than an emerald and his bananas are in the ground haha.

This is what we have in Queens today. This was a glorious tree. I have a 3 year old from the mother.

    Attached Images

  • Click image for larger version - Name: image.jpg, Views: 118, Size: 173451

Quote:
Originally Posted by rafaelissimmo
This is what we have in Queens today. This was a glorious tree. I have a 3 year old from the mother.


Thats going to come back.

Rafael- 

Just got back from a food shopping trip, and I deliberately drove through my "special" fig route on the way home.  Not one of the dozens of the larger, in-ground fig trees have shown even the slightest hint of sprouting.  Most of the older trees, have that burnt, rusty look on most of the branches.  A few of my favorite trees that have been around for decades, with 6"-10" diameter trunks, look just as bad as all the rest of the other fig trees.  I have a feeling that if any of these trees have survived, it will be from newer sprouts growing from around the roots.  All the older growth seems to have been toasted by the freezing winter.  Can it be possible that all these trees are still in a very deep coma?

Most of my containerized trees are gone and the few that I had hoped would maybe send out some green buds.... are looking worse as the days go by.  But, on a happier note....my brand new, "OLYMPIAN" fig trees are growing quite vigorously, have grown some new leaves, and have put on a few inches over the last month.  At least I have something to water.

Frank

Quote:
Originally Posted by BronxFigs
Rafael- 

Just got back from a food shopping trip, and I deliberately drove through my "special" fig route on the way home.  Not one of the dozens of the larger, in-ground fig trees have shown even the slightest hint of sprouting.  Most of the older trees, have that burnt, rusty look on most of the branches.  A few of my favorite trees that have been around for decades, with 6"-10" diameter trunks, look just as bad as all the rest of the other fig trees.  I have a feeling that if any of these trees have survived, it will be from newer sprouts growing from around the roots.  All the older growth seems to have been toasted by the freezing winter.  Can it be possible that all these trees are still in a very deep coma?

Most of my containerized trees are gone and the few that I had hoped would maybe send out some green buds.... are looking worse as the days go by.  But, on a happier note....my brand new, "OLYMPIAN" fig trees are growing quite vigorously, have grown some new leaves, and have put on a few inches over the last month.  At least I have something to water.

Frank



I think it is very possible that the trees in the Bronx suffered badly from the cold winter the NE endured this year - but that the trees may in fact be in a deep sleep. I think patience here is required. Tough, but don't be so hasty to cut it down and pull the roots out just yet. Why not a scratch test? Might make you feel more optimistic, Rafael. With your fingernail or maybe a  Swiss Army knife, slice a small piece of the outer bark off the tree about an inch above the ground. If what you see is greenish in color...celebrate!

Joe, in Georgia, but formerly of Elizabeth, NJ.

Hey Joe just a clarification-that's not my tree, I have my own that is 3 years old in container. But I love that mother tree-I met my daughter's mother at that house!

Quote:
Originally Posted by rafaelissimmo
Hey Joe just a clarification-that's not my tree, I have my own that is 3 years old in container. But I love that mother tree-I met my daughter's mother at that house!


Great story, Rafael- an important tree for you!  BTW... nice brick work on that house. I am decended from a long ling of bricklayers and I still appreciate fine brick work.  

Ciao,

Joe 

Joe-Athens1945...

Scratched many of these fig trees.  Instead of a nice juicy green under the bark, I see a dry, sickly-yellow coloration.  Maybe later in the season good things will happen and the trees will resprout.  I'm keeping my fingers crossed.  Thousands of fig trees are planted all over NYC....some neighborhoods have a fig tree in every yard.  Very sad if they were killed off by the freezing cold weather.


Frank

Quote:
Originally Posted by BronxFigs
Joe-Athens1945...

Scratched many of these fig trees.  Instead of a nice juicy green under the bark, I see a dry, sickly-yellow coloration.  Maybe later in the season good things will happen and the trees will re sprout.  I'm keeping my fingers crossed.  Thousands of fig trees are planted all over NYC....some neighborhoods have a fig tree in every yard.  Very sad if they were killed off by the freezing cold weather.


Frank
Sad indeed. I often think of the Queens, Brooklyn, Bronx and Staten Island as the home of the American fig tree.

those old trees, mostly from italy were a treasure.

I just pruned this tree 4 hours ago, Italian Honey (Unknown Nancy Light),in the Bronx, NYC, it had lots of green buds emerging below 4'.  I was able to prune about five 30 gallon garbage bags full of cuttings, but 95% was dead wood, all branches smaller than 1-1/2" caliper.
ItalianHoney_NancyLight_Spring 2013.jpg  ItalianHoney_NancyLight_BeforePruning_3-21-14.jpg ItalianHoney_NancyLight_AfterPruning_5-13-14.jpg ItalianHoney_NancyLight_AfterPruning_5-14-14.jpg ItalianHoney_NancyLight_AfterPruning1_5-14-14.jpg  .
I've been given permission to prune and train the tree as a bush form.


Load More Posts... 52 remaining topics of 102 total
Reply Cancel
Subscribe Share Cancel