| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Fig Tree Under Siege |
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cyberfarmer
Registered: Posts: 544 |
I was just admiring my favorite little potted fig tree yesterday, noticing how blemish free and vigorous it is (was). I know it was fine yesterday. Not today. I went to give my potted figs their first taste of fertilizer for the season, only to discover that my best tree was molested by some no good, low down, yellow bellied, fig hater! It really looks more like somebody took a blade and whittled off about 1/3 each of the main branch and of the only side branch. The leaves are already starting to droop in response to this insult. As usual, looking for advice on what to do here. This is not the same tree I had proposed grafting last week. Although, now I think this tree is the graft candidate. I was thinking of just dressing each of the two wounds with some damp moss and hoping a couple air layers will take off. Then, I would cut the original tree down to a nub and start over. Would it be better to air layer or just leave this alone and hope it heals? By the way, this tree was rooted almost exactly a year ago. It is in a 3 1/2 gallon container of very good soil. The roots are exploding in the pot, and it will need transplant before the end of the season. The above-ground part of the tree is a little over 2 feet. The type of fig is an unknown white. Does the double air layer sound like a good plan? Any other ideas? By the way, who the hell did this? Possible candidates are rabbits, ground squirrels, weasels, raccoon, coyotes or possums. Who done it?
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cis4elk
Registered: Posts: 1,718 |
Sorry about it! |
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cyberfarmer
Registered: Posts: 544 |
This tree has been in full sun since mid summer last year, but I wonder if recovery would be easier if I move her into an area that only gets morning sun. |
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Aaron4USA
Registered: Posts: 2,969 |
brush melted Paraffin and let it be, don't do anything else to it, it will recover. Good luck Paul. |
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PhilaGardener
Registered: Posts: 199 |
If nothing else, the wounding may stimulate a bud lower down on that main trunk. |
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Rewton
Registered: Posts: 1,946 |
My first thought was that a deer was the culprit. |
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rafed
Registered: Posts: 5,308 |
There's enough bark on the side branch to where you can tie the end of the bag to air layer. There is enough bark on the main stem as well to do the same. |
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Dieseler
Registered: Posts: 8,252 |
Look in and around grass area for rabbit poop if it was a rabbit it will be back. |
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bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
time for conejo con higos en rioja. |
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greysmith
Registered: Posts: 254 |
I feel for you. When I moved to KY I started getting critter damage in a big way. I put out a whole row of wineberries and had them all nipped off just above the ground. Not eaten, just cut cleanly off and left lay. I'm pretty sure it's deer. These are an old variety of raspberry that's very thorny. There's a native black raspberry (with few thorns) around that doesn't get this kind of damage, but does get some gnawing like I see from rabbits in the orchard. And then there's blackberries (with wicked thorns and bitter berries) that nobody seems to bother. Wineberries in pots weren't touched even though they were wide open. I've had to fence the garden, raspberry bed, and select trees. |
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jdsfrance
Registered: Posts: 2,591 |
Hi, |
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cyberfarmer
Registered: Posts: 544 |
We don't have deer here. I don't know why. Seems like a good place for them. |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,724 |
Get a dog. |
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cis4elk
Registered: Posts: 1,718 |
Paul, around here in some areas with rabbit problems they do that to bushes(or any other small woody tree) but mostly in the winter. I have known people with large expensive landscaping that hired me to come do some handiwork with a BB gun. Easy money. |
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milehighgirl
Registered: Posts: 284 |
I agree with the machete theory. The blade came down and took off a node then kept slicing down until it embedded into the scaffolding branch. So sorry! |
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DesertDance
Registered: Posts: 4,518 |
Voles will eat anything just like rabbits. We circle every single plant with about a foot of gopher wire to prevent these attacks. Bummer. |
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cyberfarmer
Registered: Posts: 544 |
Oh yes, we have voles, gophers, weasels, ground squirrels, field mice, egrets... but sounds like I might need to start checking for evidence of fig tree residue on any of my son's improvised weapons. |
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OttawanZ5
Registered: Posts: 2,551 |
I may be wrong but (a wild guess) it appears that something hard bodied object dragged through the V-shape of the plant from close to below the camera position causing bruises on both parts of the V. |
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leon_edmond
Registered: Posts: 923 |
Be careful trying to air layer both the side and the main branch together on such a young tree. I tried the same and killed the plant. I would air layer the side branch and then paint some pruning sealer(like a black tar)over the wound on the main trunk. Once the side branch roots and you separate the air layer, then try air layering the main branch later. The wound on the main trunk is not circumferential so no problem. Your tree will survive. |
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cyberfarmer
Registered: Posts: 544 |
Tree #1 and #2 are both clones from the same mother and are about the same size with about the same branch structure (2 foot main trunk with one side shoot). #1 was going to Boston where it will be raised in bush form in a pot that will be stored in a garage or shed for the winter. I was considering taking air layers from #1 before shipping since it will be pruned to bush form anyway. I turned to this group to help me decide if and how I should do this. Since then, tree #2 was attacked by something. For a while, I thought it may have been a mechanical wound from something being dropped on the tree or thrown at it. However, close inspection of the wound proved to me that this was not a knife cut. The edges of the wound are uneven - no straight edges - much more like a rodent gnawing. Anyway, as far as I'm concerned, the decision was made for me: the wounded tree now needs to be air layered. So, tree #1 will be left to grow into tree form. The central leader has been growing vigorously in the past week and the lower branch is no longer competing. On #2 (wounded tree), the side branch is cut so deeply that I feel it would be better to air layer it off. The central leader only has the outer rind stripped off, so it will probably be fine. So, I didn't have any more moss on hand. Instead, I split open a couple Root Riot cubes and placed them over the wound (no rooting hormone or anything). I then wrapped those up with plastic cling wrap. Finally, I bound the whole thing (fairly tightly) with grafting tape. For the main trunk, I simply wrapped tightly in grafting tape. The tree is in the shade for now, so I did not bother with aluminum foil (didn't have any anyway).
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cyberfarmer
Registered: Posts: 544 |
So it's been 60 days since my last post about this. After wrapping it up, I placed the tree under the shade of a tangelo tree and mostly neglected it. I did unwrap the Root Riot bundle after about 4 weeks. There was no sign of activity and it felt a little slimy. I removed the Root Riot, cleaned off the branch, and brushed on some Clonex. I replaced the Root Riot, wrapped it up in cling wrap and then a layer of aluminum foil. I checked again a couple weeks later and the Root Riot had gone bone dry. I spritzed it with some water and re-wrapped it. Last week, I unwrapped it and these fat roots had appeared. These are not the same as roots from cuttings. These were like fat little worms! |
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