Register  |   | 
 
 
 


Reply
  Author   Comment  
Smungung

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 440
Reply with quote  #1 
My fig's leaves are shriveling up the big one in the black pot is a neri1 the two in the red pot is a strawberry verte and the small one is a Syrian long. Do you guys have any idea what the problem is?
__________________
Matthew Mei Age:15 Zone 6A Secaucus, New Jersey

Aquarist any questions pertaining to fish shoot me a message always willing to help! :)
Gardener
Fisherman
Smungung

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 440
Reply with quote  #2 
I can't add the pictures they're over 1mb what can I do
__________________
Matthew Mei Age:15 Zone 6A Secaucus, New Jersey

Aquarist any questions pertaining to fish shoot me a message always willing to help! :)
Gardener
Fisherman
Garlic_Mike

Registered:
Posts: 251
Reply with quote  #3 
In your settings reduce the resolution and they should fit.
Garlic_Mike

Registered:
Posts: 251
Reply with quote  #4 
Without the pictures I would guess water.

I have had some wilting and brought them back with a good soak.

Hot Summer with little rain. I have to water every day or two to keep up.

Dead man walking when the water bill comes for sure.

In Ct, we are @5" short on water

Mike
Smungung

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 440
Reply with quote  #5 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Garlic_Mike
In your settings reduce the resolution and they should fit.
how do I do that?

__________________
Matthew Mei Age:15 Zone 6A Secaucus, New Jersey

Aquarist any questions pertaining to fish shoot me a message always willing to help! :)
Gardener
Fisherman
ross

Registered:
Posts: 375
Reply with quote  #6 
Quote:
Originally Posted by Smungung
how do I do that?


http://lmgtfy.com/?q=how+do+I+reduce+the+resolution+of+my+photos%3F

__________________
Ross - Zone 6B/7A - Philadelphia
My Cultivar List / Pictures! / My YouTube
Smungung

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 440
Reply with quote  #7 
Got it to work thanks so what would be the problem with the plants?

Attached Images
jpeg image.jpeg (140.88 KB, 86 views)
jpeg image.jpeg (118.22 KB, 76 views)
jpeg image.jpeg (128.72 KB, 61 views)


__________________
Matthew Mei Age:15 Zone 6A Secaucus, New Jersey

Aquarist any questions pertaining to fish shoot me a message always willing to help! :)
Gardener
Fisherman

brandon87

Registered:
Posts: 79
Reply with quote  #8 
Could be nutrient burn. Could be a type of fungus. How much fertilizer are you giving it? I'm not nearly as knowledgable as the experts on here. Just trying to help narrow it down.
__________________
Zone 9 NW Houston--  Open to trades, message me.
figpig_66

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 2,678
Reply with quote  #9 
Sun burn too
__________________
RICHIE BONI
HICKORY LOUISIANA ZONE 8B WARM HUMID
WINRERS ARE VERY MILD LOW 20'S BUT WARMS RIGHT UP DURING THE DAY. SUMMER IS EXTREMELY HOT & HUMID 100 degrees 100% humidity fig tree grow like crazy but some split from rain & humidity
Wish list. Col de dame blanc
Col de rimada
Lsu numbered figs
ross

Registered:
Posts: 375
Reply with quote  #10 
I agree with Richie & Brandon. You may not be watering enough too.
__________________
Ross - Zone 6B/7A - Philadelphia
My Cultivar List / Pictures! / My YouTube
jdsfrance

Registered:
Posts: 2,591
Reply with quote  #11 
Hi,
Pot too small, nutrients depleted, roots cooked from the sun, lack of water, and rootbound .
You should have up potted beginning of August to keep them on track.
I'd do it asap, or they'll get in a worst shape, and may die.

Of course, with some more water you could sort of keep them alive. But for that size, they just need a bigger pot to keep on growing. They can use one liter of water every day with that size and the current summer heat .

I have some like that that are still happy ... Because the roots escaped the pots and are now in the free dirt underneath ... Call it cheating ! Call it adapting to a less than ideal situation .

__________________
------------------------
Climate from -25°C to + 35°C
Only cold hardy figtrees can make it here
snaglpus

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 4,072
Reply with quote  #12 
JDS is correct here.  Your tree is root bound and not getting enough water.  Even though you may be watering it, the roots are over heating and loosing moisture.  It will continue to do that until you repot is into a larger pot.  The tree will live but not produce any figs.  Its a continuous cycle unless you give the tree more soil and water.  I wouldn't up size it to a 5 gallon bucket either!  Go bigger!  Good luck!
__________________
Dennis
Charlotte, North Carolina/Zone 8a 

Smungung

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 440
Reply with quote  #13 
okay thanks i will try and find larger containers and is it too late to plant some of them into the ground?


__________________
Matthew Mei Age:15 Zone 6A Secaucus, New Jersey

Aquarist any questions pertaining to fish shoot me a message always willing to help! :)
Gardener
Fisherman
jdsfrance

Registered:
Posts: 2,591
Reply with quote  #14 
A potted tree can be planted in ground whenever you want ... If the dirt is frozen ... It is much harder (just guessing) ...
But till mid-November you could plant them.

__________________
------------------------
Climate from -25°C to + 35°C
Only cold hardy figtrees can make it here
Ken

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 47
Reply with quote  #15 
In my opinion, JDS is spot on. A note about up potting root bound fig trees: when you free the root ball from the pot, it may help if you put the root ball in a bucket of fresh water to loosen the compacted soil and let the roots start to move away from the trunk. You may want to GENTLY agitate the plant in the water to facilitate some of the untangle. Where you are, it is not too late to up pot to a three-gallon, for example. Search on this forum for soil mixes you may want to use. Note that "not getting enough water" means more than just watering it more. When a plant is very root bound, the water, finding the path of least resistance, goes down the sides of the pot and out the bottom, leaving the plant/roots dry.

As for easy manipulation of photographs: Consider the free download, free program, IrfanView. It's user friendly and has edit and image pull-down menus that can help adjust the dimensions as well as the "size" of your photos. http://download.cnet.com/IrfanView/

Previous Topic | Next Topic
Print
Reply