dremusicmd
Registered:1416630798 Posts: 7
Posted 1417578546
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#1
I have some experience in rooting both softwood and hardwood cuttings of various ornamental shrubs/plants and edibles. However, this will be my first go round with figs. I'm using Rich's Propagation Method. The green tubs will be replaced with larger clear ones this weekend and the saran wrap tent with a humidity dome. Heat mats are underneath. After about an hour I opened the tent to see what it felt like in there and wow...it was much much warmer than I was expecting already. I think thats a good sign!
__________________ Wish list...Sicilian Red, Brooklyn White, Violette de Boudeaux, Chicago Hardy, Malta Black, Marseilles Black, Lyndhurst White, Excel, Adriatic JH, Nordland Bergfeige
COGardener
Registered:1357441505 Posts: 814
Posted 1417578884
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#2
Nice collection of cuttings there! I hope they are all successful you, thank you for sharing. Welcome to the forum Scott
drphil69
Registered:1390113240 Posts: 803
Posted 1417578969
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#3
Good luck! Do you have the heat mat thermostat controlled? Be sure not to let it get too hot!
__________________ Phil - Zone 7A - Newark, DE Newbie fig lover just trying to learn.
dremusicmd
Registered:1416630798 Posts: 7
Posted 1417579134
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#4
Hi Phil, I don't have a thermostat on it. It's not a very high powered one. It says it only raises the temp 10 to 20 degrees above the air temp. The cuttings are in a basement that stays between 60 and 70 pretty much year round. Could it still get too hot?
__________________ Wish list...Sicilian Red, Brooklyn White, Violette de Boudeaux, Chicago Hardy, Malta Black, Marseilles Black, Lyndhurst White, Excel, Adriatic JH, Nordland Bergfeige
rafaelissimmo
Registered:1335639347 Posts: 1,473
Posted 1417612561
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#5
The thermostat/probe is essential. The ideal temperature for your cuttings is 78 F so you want to keep it there as often as possible. The probe guarantees that.
__________________ Zone 7b, Queens, New York
FiggyFrank
Registered:1347560723 Posts: 2,713
Posted 1417624844
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#6
Looks great! The first variety I would put in ground is MBVS if you have space. You'll be rewarded with more figs than most other varieties. The common term for this variety is how much of a 'workhorse' it is.
__________________ Frank zone 7a - VA
COGardener
Registered:1357441505 Posts: 814
Posted 1417625816
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#7
It looks like you have 24 cutting in the totes, what all did you get?
nycfig
Registered:1380768118 Posts: 886
Posted 1417629803
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#8
Welcome, Andrae' - Nice start. Be sure to get the thermostat. It's a cheap investment that'll save you some heartache.
__________________ Danny NYC Z7a It's all about the figs!Facebook: NYCfigs Buying Fig Trees and Cuttings From the Internet
brettjm
Registered:1398901785 Posts: 215
Posted 1417639498
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#9
Welcome and good luck. I've never rooted anything from cuttings before, and I just started a few weeks ago (20 days to be exact). I'm trying out a combination of methods, since I have multiples of most of my cuttings, but the end result is a humidified grow chamber much like Rich's. Seems to be working relatively well so far... My real winner thus far is Ronde de Bordeaux. Started 2, both have leafed out, and one has great root development already. Hope you have good luck.
__________________ In GA, Zone 7b/8a Wish list: more space to put in figs.
Frankallen
Registered:1371842383 Posts: 994
Posted 1417654722
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#10
W E L C O M E , Andrae'.............. Glad you joined us , Good luck with your fig cuttings! Remember , always do a lot more than you actually need,then there will be no disappointments...:)
__________________Frank from Bama - Zone 7-b Alabama ...................................................."Live as if you were to die tomorrow. Learn as if you were to live forever". Mahatma Gandhi
eboone
Registered:1378418906 Posts: 1,101
Posted 1417655554
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#11
Quote:
Originally Posted by Frankallen W E L C O M E , Andrae'.............. Glad you joined us , Good luck with your fig cuttings! Remember , always do a lot more than you actually need,then there will be no disappointments...:)
Welcome! As Frank said above - always do some extras - makes nice gift for friends and family - to create more fig nuts, and gives you something to trade for more varieties as well.
__________________ Ed Zone 6A - Southwest PA --------------------------- Short wish list: CDDG, LSU Red, Dark Greek (Navid), Col Littman's Black Cross . And any cold hardy early fig.
ChrisK
Registered:1415844271 Posts: 937
Posted 1417655929
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#12
Welcome Andrae“!
Beautiful job and great looking cuttings! Best of luck!
I start mine in a Baggie and when I see good root growth I pot them in a clear pot on MG starter soil all on top of my fridge with very good results! The house at a constant 70 F but up there it is probably a bit warmer! No leafing but very strong root development !
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__________________ ChrisK
Atl GA
Zone 7b-8a
ChrisK
Registered:1415844271 Posts: 937
Posted 1417656314
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#13
Sorry, I skipped a step! The clear cup! Here it is.
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__________________ ChrisK
Atl GA
Zone 7b-8a
Otmani007
Registered:1404531079 Posts: 573
Posted 1417656577
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#14
Welcome to the forum and good luck with your cuttings.
__________________ Dallas, TX - Zone 8a
Wish List: Col de Dame Blanche, Brogiotto Bianco, Sicilian White, Panache
Otmani
waynea
Registered:1362316304 Posts: 1,886
Posted 1417656847
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#15
Real nice collection, welcome to the forum.
dremusicmd
Registered:1416630798 Posts: 7
Posted 1417658149
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#16
Rafael and nycfig, I'll have to look into the thermostat and probe this weekend...Can I attach the thermostat to my existing heat mat? FiggyFrank, I live on 26 acres that my great grandparents inherited in the early 1900's (20 of which we cash rent out) I have about 15 varieties of grapes that I will be training over an arbor in the spring. I'm planning on planting out the figs behind the arbor and hopefully get some winter protection there. COGardener, I purchased Italian Honey, MBVS, Excel, Dottato, Negronne, LSU Gold, Salem Dark, and Portuguese Dark...A very generous member sent me a few more MBVS and Red Sicilian. I also have some Hardy Chicago on their way as well. I guess I need to change my wishlist now. Haha! FrankAllen and Eboone, I'm out of indoor growing space! Maybe it is time to add the sunroom to the back of the house. Haha. I think I'll try the baggie method mentioned in this thread for some of the additional cuttings I receive over the winter. Chris K, I'm gonna give that method a shot with some of the extra cuttings I have. Are the roots very delicate when rooted in the baggies? Thank you everyone for the welcomes and well wishes!
__________________ Wish list...Sicilian Red, Brooklyn White, Violette de Boudeaux, Chicago Hardy, Malta Black, Marseilles Black, Lyndhurst White, Excel, Adriatic JH, Nordland Bergfeige
RichinNJ
Registered:1374784282 Posts: 1,687
Posted 1417658407
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#17
Keep up the good work. Let's see how it goes. A thermostat would make things a little easier on you.
COGardener
Registered:1357441505 Posts: 814
Posted 1417658572
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#18
A very nice collection, I'm sure they will all do very well for you, I look forward to watching them grow as the years go by.
ChrisK
Registered:1415844271 Posts: 937
Posted 1417659066
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#19
Not at all. More robust than the ones that develop in water (in a vase with some good water,not tap, takes a lot longer than the Baggie about 50% success) I think it also has to do with the variety! Some are much easier to root than others! Make sure You check them every day and let some fresh air in the bag! There are some good videos on YouTube , how to propagate fig cuttings!! I wrap them in damp paper towel and put them in a ziplock bag!
__________________ ChrisK
Atl GA
Zone 7b-8a
dremusicmd
Registered:1416630798 Posts: 7
Posted 1417660275
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#20
Thanks Rich, I'm looking forward to ROOTS! COGardener, So am I my friend! ChrisK, Yep, definitely gonna try that out on top of the fridge. That adds to my indoor growing space! Haha!
__________________ Wish list...Sicilian Red, Brooklyn White, Violette de Boudeaux, Chicago Hardy, Malta Black, Marseilles Black, Lyndhurst White, Excel, Adriatic JH, Nordland Bergfeige
schaplin
Registered:1392175246 Posts: 662
Posted 1417673801
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#21
Welcome It looks like your off to a great start. Sharon
__________________ Wish List: @Hmari, @Maltese beauty, @Col de Dame Grise, @Bryant Dark, @Lynhurst White, @Melcedonia Dark, @Panevino Dark, @Paradiso
RichinNJ
Registered:1374784282 Posts: 1,687
Posted 1417692555
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#22
Quote:
Originally Posted by dremusicmd Rafael and nycfig, I'll have to look into the thermostat and probe this weekend...Can I attach the thermostat to my existing heat mat? FiggyFrank, I live on 26 acres that my great grandparents inherited in the early 1900's (20 of which we cash rent out) I have about 15 varieties of grapes that I will be training over an arbor in the spring. I'm planning on planting out the figs behind the arbor and hopefully get some winter protection there. COGardener, I purchased Italian Honey, MBVS, Excel, Dottato, Negronne, LSU Gold, Salem Dark, and Portuguese Dark...A very generous member sent me a few more MBVS and Red Sicilian. I also have some Hardy Chicago on their way as well. I guess I need to change my wishlist now. Haha! FrankAllen and Eboone, I'm out of indoor growing space! Maybe it is time to add the sunroom to the back of the house. Haha. I think I'll try the baggie method mentioned in this thread for some of the additional cuttings I receive over the winter. Chris K, I'm gonna give that method a shot with some of the extra cuttings I have. Are the roots very delicate when rooted in the baggies? Thank you everyone for the welcomes and well wishes!
I use a Hydrofarm thermostat. I bought it on Amazon. You plug the thermostat into the wall and the mat into the thermostat. Then put the probe half way down and centered in a cup with soil mix and a cutting.