| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Sal's EL |
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bugs
Registered: Posts: 356 |
Got the cutting 11-6-2011, they have been in a SW. The taste was sweet jam like with a little crunch. Only picked 3 one needed 1or 2 more days. A keeper for me. I will pick the other when they are really ripe. |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,727 |
Yours are way ahead of mine. |
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Dieseler
Registered: Posts: 8,252 |
Thanks for the picture Bugs of Sals EL a good productive fig plant that was a mainstay for long time in yard . |
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striveforfreedom
Registered: Posts: 437 |
Those look excellent bugs and at least a year ahead of mine. The SWC's look like they really bring the figs along much faster than pots alone. What kind of a mix are you using in your SWC? The air pots seem to do nicely also so I think there is definitely a link there. |
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garden_whisperer
Registered: Posts: 1,613 |
I have a sal's G. Are these the same? I had some sal's C cuttings rooting very nice but gnats got them over winter. |
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newnandawg
Registered: Posts: 2,535 |
Bugs, very nice |
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kubota1
Registered: Posts: 1,364 |
Bugs, Great pictures! I can't wait to get some figs from mine. Thanks again. |
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Marc
Registered: Posts: 49 |
Bugs, very nice thanks for sharing |
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bugs
Registered: Posts: 356 |
Rob, My Desert King did not do will for me this year, thanks |
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ChillyNPhilly
Registered: Posts: 365 |
All about Sals: |
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deerhunter16b
Registered: Posts: 785 |
They look great |
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robertharper
Registered: Posts: 369 |
Back in the middle of the 90's, one of the people who got me interested in growing and testing northern climate, cold hardy figs, was Paul Tracesky. He and Hanc Matthies introduced Sal's EL. |
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Charitup
Registered: Posts: 592 |
thanks for sharing another one I am waiting for. |
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musillid
Registered: Posts: 1,507 |
All good information. Thanks. |
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bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
they wonderful looking figs. hope our weather will hold out for next few days for me to see my figs turning out like that... |
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Quackmaster
Registered: Posts: 769 |
I have some sal's el cuttings in a baggy right now and they just starting to show roots, I hope it's not too late and they make it through the winter. Sal's looks and sounds like a good one to have. |
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cis4elk
Registered: Posts: 1,719 |
Martin, |
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Rewton
Registered: Posts: 1,946 |
Here is Gene Hosey's notes on SalsEL: " Tasty fig that does well on the east coast; similar to Hardy Chicago, but more productive. Mine originated from Edible Landscaping Nursery, which now considers it to be identical to Hardy Chicago. I disagree based on my own observations -- also, preliminary DNA testing by the National Germplasm Repository at Davis indicates that Sal's is closely related to HC, but not the same. Research by Byron Wiley indicates that Paul Traceski obtained this fig many years ago from a fellow named Sal in Huntington Station, Long Island. Paul gave the fig to Belleclare Nursery who added it to their inventory as #39. He also gave one to Hanc Matthies who in turn passed it on to Edible Landscaping. Note also that the UC-Davis DFIC 243 originates ultimately back through Edible Landscaping, and is not Sal's Corleone (BC #31)." At the address where Gene used to live in Washington DC the yard still has a few of his favorite cultivars in-ground one of which is SalsEL. Anyway, a few months ago Gene told me that one of the branches on the SalsEL in that yard is a sport that puts out two fruits at every node rather than the usual one. He asked me if I wanted to propagate and then provide it to others if successful. The pic shows one of the cuttings starting to leaf out. The only problem is that I am not 100% I got cuttings from the right branch because the tree was nearly dormant (and no longer fruiting) by the time I drove there to collect cuttings. The instructions from Gene were kind of cryptic. I am hoping that by next summer I will be able to tell if I really did take cuttings from the SalsEL sport and the year after that I should be able to send it out to some people. Stay tuned. |
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