tonysiny
Registered:1353803439 Posts: 11
Posted 1353804321
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#1
Hello: Best wishes for the holidays! I live off the beach, about 2 miles, when suddenly, a 20 foot wave began moving at the shore line, and ended up on Hylan Boulevard located in Staten Island, NY. My back yard had 4 feet of water. My car floated down the street. It was inspected by the insurance company and flag as completely total. This was salt water from the ocean, with the combined water from the marshes located on the right of Seaver Avenue. My 7 fig trees were flooded almost to the top of the branches for about several hours. The next day, the water subsided. My question is: Are my fig trees and garden soil destroyed and/or contaminated by the polluted water ? Regards, Tony .....
__________________ Tony Staten Island, NY Zone 6B
TONYSAC
Registered:1337644850 Posts: 1,031
Posted 1353804863
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#2
Run sprinklers it will push salt water down rinse the trees good you should be ok
__________________ Anthony Garden city park, Long Island NY 11040 Zone 7b : 5 to 10 (F) (Nassau) FIGS4FUN1@aol.com Im here to help Crazy80z28 on Ebay Wish list... Hmmm more room.
pitangadiego
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Registered:1188871011 Posts: 5,447
Posted 1353805195
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#3
If the soil was pretty wet, already, then the plants were "full" of water and were not tempted to take a deep drink. if they were on the dry side, then then would take up water until they were "full". They they might be damaged in a way that is similar to what happens when you fertilize a dry plant - you get a burned plant. You probably have a high water table, so it may be difficult to flush the salts out by watering without over saturating your soil, but Tony is right, the way to remove salt is to irrigate and flush it out of the root zone.
__________________ Encanto Farms Nursery
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"pitangadiego" everywhere
tonysiny
Registered:1353803439 Posts: 11
Posted 1353805602
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#4
Thank you. Will soak them down tomorrow to flush out all the pollution..... Keep my fingers cross. Thank u all, Tony
__________________ Tony Staten Island, NY Zone 6B
ForeverFigs
Registered:1351425467 Posts: 1,062
Posted 1353806776
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#5
Tony, I have seen some amazing recoverys in plant life in general, and fig trees in particular. What appears to me to be totally dead, somehow still has life deep inside, and in it's own time makes a remarkable recovery. The general opinion is that fig trees are delicate and fragile. I don't find this to be true. I think that fig trees have a remarkable strength deep in their root system that gives them the ability to overcome adverse conditions and come back again and again to live, and grow, and produce. The people of New York are strong and the people of Staten Island are exceptionally strong, and the fig trees in that place will flourish once again. Sincerely,
__________________ Vince
Edison N.J.
Zone 6b
Wish List: LaRadek's EBT
Chapman
Registered:1267669490 Posts: 351
Posted 1353808368
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#6
Your soil is not destroyed. It will recover but it may take a while for the salt to leach out. Hopefully your fig trees will be ok but that much salt water may have killed them.
__________________ South Louisiana, Zone 9
Alan1631
Registered:1347991991 Posts: 145
Posted 1353808662
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#7
Make sure you flush as much as possible. if they are in containers, I would try lifting out the root balls and rincing them really well for a couple of days. The important part is to leave them in standing water for a long period as the roots will begin to rot. You main enemy is the salt, not the pollution. If you take care of the roots, the tree should recover.
__________________ Alan
_____________________________
Zone 9 - Central Florida
Wish List: Panache, Bourjosotte Gris, Raspberry Latte, Petite Negri, Black Maderia, Cajun Honey
Grasa
Registered:1347083219 Posts: 1,819
Posted 1353809662
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#8
The base of fertilizers is salt - so I keep my fingers crossed your tree will be able to transform the salt into food and will make recovery in no time. Keep us informed. Best of luck there.
__________________ Grasa
Seattle, WA
Chapman
Registered:1267669490 Posts: 351
Posted 1353810160
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#9
I went through 2 hurricanes, Rita in 2005 and Ike in 2008. The worst damage was south of me where the storm surge hit. These areas lost most of their trees. The only trees that lived were mostly Live Oaks and a lot of them died also.
__________________ South Louisiana, Zone 9
genecolin
Registered:1248866064 Posts: 1,542
Posted 1353811943
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#10
Tony, I too suffered the hurricanes that Chapman mentioned. I had 5 to 6 foot of Gulf water on my property as did my neighbors. Most fig trees survived unless they were damaged by the wind or the surge. "gene"
__________________ From the bayou,
"gene"
zone 9
Houma, La.