| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Yellowing Leaves |
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cyberfarmer
Registered: Posts: 544 |
I have 8 figs in 1/2 gallon containers that I started from cuttings in February. They were originally placed in damp perlite in bags, then moved to 50/50 perlite/vermiculite in 16oz plastic cups. When I moved them to the 1/2 gallon pots, I combined the mix from each cup with the soil (decomposed granite) where I intend to eventually plant the trees. The first month in the 1/2 gallon pots, they did GREAT. They put out 2 or 3 big leaves each, which were all a nice deep green and looked supple and healthy. |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,724 |
I'd rinse off the soil and repot in one of the recommended potting mixes. Ultimate potting mix or fafard #52. Members here report good success with them. Let them recover before you fertilize again. That much kelp sounds like a lot for a 1 gal pot but I'm not familiar with that product. Potted plants get something like 1/10th what you'd give an in-ground plant, baby plants maybe even less. |
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cyberfarmer
Registered: Posts: 544 |
The directions on the box call for 1 tablespoon for a new planting in a 1 gallon container. Maybe these little guys just weren't developed enough to handle a normal dose? |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,724 |
It could be many things. A sudden increase in sun light, too much or too little water for the soil, The soil particles are too fine, herbicide spray from a neighbor, maybe things I haven't mentioned. I used a fish emulsion/kelp extract exactly as directed and the next am all the plants I put it on were dead. |
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cyberfarmer
Registered: Posts: 544 |
Here's some pics. They don't look that yellow here, but they are compared to the dark green they had a couple weeks ago. |
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americanfiglover
Registered: Posts: 643 |
Low iron if the leaves are old. |
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hoosierbanana
Registered: Posts: 2,186 |
I bet the soil and perlite have separated and created stale conditions that are causing root trouble. I would plant some out asap and have a look and repot the others before things get worse . |
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cyberfarmer
Registered: Posts: 544 |
Plant some out? As in open ground in the orchard? I have been considering that. I would love to get them in the ground ASAP. The weather is certainly warm enough. Most of the directions I've been following seem to suggest keeping them in pots for the first year. I'm not really sure why. If I'm going to have to pull them out of the pots anyway, might I go ahead and put them in the ground now? |
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americanfiglover
Registered: Posts: 643 |
remove all soil raise and repot. If it continues then it's a nutrient problem. Your soil is most likely missing something or is having too much of something. |
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hoosierbanana
Registered: Posts: 2,186 |
This is from the UC's Specialty and Minor Crops Handbook Pub 3346: |
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Dieseler
Registered: Posts: 8,252 |
Personally i would keep that plant in its pot and in the shade and not add anything to it nor pull plant out of its pot. |
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bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
agree with martin. leave it alone. put it in partial sun or shade. don't fertilize. see how they respond. water only when the container is almost dry, but not completely. you should be able to feel the weight, when the pot is very light. personally, i don't think they look all that bad. |
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cyberfarmer
Registered: Posts: 544 |
Well, that 90°F day occurred just a few days before they yellowed, so that seems more likely to be the problem. I only gave a half dose of 1-0.5-2 fertilizer... I wouldn't think that would be strong enough to burn it, but then I am new at this. |
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hoosierbanana
Registered: Posts: 2,186 |
Yes they will absolutely do better in the ground. Potted figs will never reach the same size or productivity as those in the ground. Soil in "the ground" works because there is good drainage and bacteria, fungi, etc that keeps the root zone nice for the tree. Soil in a pot holds water and will not let it go, then shrinks when drying and separates on rewetting. |
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cyberfarmer
Registered: Posts: 544 |
I just wanted to follow up with the outcome on these figs. I decided to observe them a while longer before doing anything. They actually started to perk up a bit. No new growth, but the leaves seemed to be regaining some color. Then, we had another hot day and the leaves yellowed again. Seemed pretty obvious to me that the yellowing was caused by too much sun/heat. I moved them back further under the eaves so that the only got an hour or two of direct sunlight. They seemed to like that a lot. However, still very little growth, if any. |
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bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
good to know it worked out for you. i try not to disturb the roots as much as possible with any problem. once root is disturbed, the stress can set back the plant for a month or more leading to taking further unnecessary actions that can kill the plant. but i'm sure there are times when repotting is the only option. |
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ForeverFigs
Registered: Posts: 1,062 |
I agree with Dieseler, and bullet08, to put them in the shade, and do nothing else...I was given a Col de Dame Noir back in March/April and it was a beautiful green color and doing well...then the bottom two leaves turned yellow and eventually fell off, so I talked to the forum member who had given me the tree(very experienced member)and he said to put it in the shade and give it a rest, and it recovered nicely and now has put on additional leaves and about 2 1/2" of additional growth. |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,724 |
Glad they got better for you! |
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