goodeats4me
Registered:1337620162 Posts: 25
Posted 1404404732
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#1
Hello fig lovers this is my first post and I want to thank all of you who share your wisdom with those of us still learning the basics. I have a 3ft plant of unknown variety in a 15 gallon pot that has a very low branch almost laying flat on the soil and curving up almost a foot. I have read what I could find about stooling and would appreciate any tips. It is going to be scorching hot here for the next 2 months and I would like to know how to approach this. There will be 3 months of decent weather in the fall before it gets cold and I hope that would be enough time to root it. The tree is doing very well and just started bearing some figs. Thanks for the advice Larry
__________________ Larry Field Mesa AZ 9B
FMD
Registered:1309800590 Posts: 1,327
Posted 1404407901
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#2
Stooling... Cool word for rooting or layering. Welcome aboard, Larry. Where do you live? If you cover that low lying branch branch with potting soil, mulch it and keep it damp throughout the summer, I am sure it will stool for you, no problema. If you live in the desert and have problems keeping the stool damp, then I would suggest air layering using a plastic container which will retain moisture for longer periods of time. Good luck.
__________________Frank Tallahassee, FL Zone 8b North Florida Figs
Rewton
Registered:1291943117 Posts: 1,946
Posted 1404408656
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#3
LOL, I've heard it referred to as "ground layering" but "stooling" is a new one. I did this once with a good sized branch but did not girdle the cambium layer prior to covering with soil. Probably because of that I didn't have as many roots as would have been optimal but it did survive. In addition to girdling (just as you would for air layers) I would suggest using landscaping staples or a large rock etc. to hold the branch down. You don't want the wind to bring it out of the soil that is covering it.
__________________ Steve MD zone 7a
strudeldog
Registered:1278124225 Posts: 747
Posted 1404411517
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#4
Stooling is a pretty common term if you step outside the fig circle. Thats how many your rootstock plants for apples etc... are produced. I thought about trying it on a fig this year that sent a multitude of shoots up from frozen to ground plants. I decided not as I didn't want that many of that cultivar, but I would think it would work fine
__________________ Phil N.GA. Zone 7 Looking for: De La Reina, Del La Senyora, Martinenca Rimada, Parfum De Cafards, Ponte Tresa, Sangue Dulce, Emalyn's Purple, and on and on
ascpete
Registered:1336096379 Posts: 1,942
Posted 1404416439
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#5
Larry, Welcome to the forum community. A single low branch is more easily air layered instead of stooling. Any of the documented fig "air layering" procedures will work better because a single container will be used to contain the new roots of the air layer and it can be removed well before the end of the season. Stooling works quite well with fig trees because multiple shoots are produced at the lower nodes when the apical tips are pruned, but the stooling process is a bit more involved and is better suited to propagation of multiple plants like the mentioned apple rootstock... A single trunk with a substancial root mass is cut close to the soil line, similar to pruning in a bush form, the soil is then mounded as the multiple shoots grow out, when the plant is dormant, at the end of the season, the individual rooted branches are seperated and grown as individual trees. Good Luck. BTW, Stooling is a form of Layering, as is Air Layering and Ground Layering. Stooling just requires additional planning, pruning and a longer period of time to harvest new individual plants.
jdsfrance
Registered:1376988473 Posts: 2,591
Posted 1404422509
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#6
Hi goodeats4me, Welcome to the forum. More heat, more watering for you. I made some stooling on a branch - the branch was already bent towards the dirt, and just a shovel of dirt over it made it stay down- and even without watering the area the branch rooted - ok not as quickly as it could have, but still the branch rooted, and is now a tree in an eighty liters trashcan with bottom removed. I tared apart that tree in April 2013, and this year the tree has some 6 brebas and is growing strong. The tree is now 1,5 meters in height.
__________________ ------------------------
Climate from -25°C to + 35°C
Only cold hardy figtrees can make it here
goodeats4me
Registered:1337620162 Posts: 25
Posted 1404422633
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#7
Thanks for all the good info, I must admit "stooling" is a new word to me also since searching for answers. Would have preferred something a bit more normal. lol I think I will do an air layer with a container after considering all the suggestions, that seems to be the best method. I am a Midwest transplant living in the twilight zone also known as Arizona, a few miles east of Phoenix. I am now retired but have worked outdoors in subzero weather and in 116 here and the heat is a piece of cake compared to the cold. I have half a house worth of plywood cut into small squares protecting the sides of my containers from the sun. I am also growing bananas, mangoes, guavas, passionfruit, various citrus, and apples. Thanks again for the advice Larry Mesa AZ zone 9b
__________________ Larry Field Mesa AZ 9B
rcantor
Registered:1309799312 Posts: 5,727
Posted 1404423557
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#8
Welcome to the forum and good luck with all that fruit!
__________________ Zone 6, MO Wish list: Galicia Negra, De La Reina - Pons, Genovese Nero - Rafed's, Sbayi, Souadi, Acciano, Any Rimada, Sodus Sicilian, any Bass, Pons or Axier fig, any great tasting fig.
GeneDaniels
Registered:1384021772 Posts: 1,014
Posted 1404433736
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#9
Mangoes, man I wish I could grow them here in Arkansas! I loved fresh mangoes when I have been in India.
__________________ Zone 7b (Central Arkansas) Seven trees in the ground : Hardy Chicago, Celeste(?), LSU gold, Italian Black, Southern Brown Turkey(?), Strawberry Verte, and Unk yellow. Trees in pots: VdB, CdD, and Sicilian?
pitangadiego
Moderator
Registered:1188871011 Posts: 5,447
Posted 1404437572
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#10
Stooling is essentially the same as air-layering, in terms of the basic process. you put soil around a shoot or branch, keep it moist, and it will grow roots. Then y0u detach it from the parent plant. What you are proposing is more often called layering or ground-layering because it is done in the ground. whereas air-layering is done "in the air" above the ground. Just another way to skin a cat, so to speak.
__________________ Encanto Farms Nursery
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"pitangadiego" everywhere
mgginva
Registered:1320266925 Posts: 1,857
Posted 1404440440
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#11
Welcome. You have enough good advise already. I'd just add that I use a small bamboo stick to hold the little guy in place and then put a piece of colored tree tape at the top of the bamboo stake so I remember where it is and as it's color coded what it is.
__________________ Michael in Virginia (zone 7a) Wish list: Perretta,
jdsfrance
Registered:1376988473 Posts: 2,591
Posted 1404469724
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#12
Hi, I do agree that stooling and air-layering are essentially the same, but with two big differences : Drawback of airlayering: If the tree is not at hand - say 30 km away from you - eventually the container will get bone dry ... and the air-layering will fail. Drawback ?yes/no? of stooling : The roots are not in a container. So they can grow wild - but when you fetch the tree, you'll be cutting some and so you don't get the full root-mass. For me the point was the watering that I knew wouldn't be done even if I asked. Damn nephew ! Just Playstation the whole year everything else is not worth caring of, for him !
__________________ ------------------------
Climate from -25°C to + 35°C
Only cold hardy figtrees can make it here