Register  |   | 
 
 
 


Reply
  Author   Comment  
Ruuting

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 613
Reply with quote  #1 
I didn't want to change the subject of Eli's thread about girdling, so here goes.

Eli, you said something in that thread that reminded me of a question I'd thought
of asking the forum.
I'm not the only one who's heard of somebody beating their fig tree!
HA!

I have a buddy who knows an older Italian man that beats his fig tree, right before
winter sets in.

"What do you mean, he beats it?" I asked, in disbelief.
"Yeah, he takes a baseball bat and beats the hell out of it!"
He says, laughing hysterically.

Apparently this makes his tree less likely to dry up in our cold winters.

That sounded ridiculous to me...

Is anybody else here beating their fig trees?
Do you know somebody that beats their fig trees?
Have you witnessed a fig tree beating?
I'd love to hear more about this, now that the cat's out of the bag.
Is there a video on YouTube that shows the proper technique?
-all in fun-

Eli, you mentioned a person that does it to increase fruit production, and I heard that it affects
winter hardiness.

What on Earth...?

__________________
Rui
Southeast CT, zone 6B
bullet08

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 6,920
Reply with quote  #2 
i used to practice kendo... that involves beating the tar out of each other with bamboo sword... never really though about beating up a tree. that doesn't seem very sporting... lol
__________________
Pete
Durham, NC
Zone 7b

"don't talk to me about naval tradition. It's nothing but rum, sodomy and the lash." - sir winston churchill
"the problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money." - the baroness thatcher

***** all my figs have FMV/FMD, in case you're wondering. *****
***** and... i don't sell things. what little i have will be posted here in winter for first come first serve base to be shared. no, i'm not a socialist...*****
dkirtexas

Registered:
Posts: 1,330
Reply with quote  #3 
Southern farmers used "Flail" Okra, basically involved taking a small stick and beating the Okra stalks, was said to increase production, I don't know if it did.
__________________
Thx, glad to be here

Danny K "EL CAZADOR DE HIGO"
Waskom Tx Zone 7B/8

Wish list: anything anyone wants me to have. LSU RED.  Any LSU fig.
garden_whisperer

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 1,613
Reply with quote  #4 
Lol pete.

I don't know about beating a tree, but living in zone 6b I would consider if there was enough compelling proof.

__________________
Dave Zone 6b Illinois

"Be the change you wish to see in the world"
WillsC

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 1,698
Reply with quote  #5 
I know people will beat the tar out of citrus trees that stall what they use is a length of garden hose folded over.  
jdarden1963

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 425
Reply with quote  #6 
Well, I've never heard of anyone beating a fig tree to make it more tolerant of the cold winters but when I was growing up, my grandmother would use a ladder to climb up the tree and beat the limbs with a stick or shake the limbs to knock off the figs she couldn't reach. 
__________________
Jules

Zone 8a
NE Texas

Wish List: LSU Thibodeaux, LSU Red, Kathleen's Black, Lebanese Red, Jolly Tiger, Black Madeira, Purple Passion, Zingerilla (sp?), Martin's Purple Black, BA-1, White Ischia, any red fig, any dark fig or unknown
Dieseler

Registered:
Posts: 8,252
Reply with quote  #7 
Been known to heat them real hot but never did i beat them .

Figaro

Registered:
Posts: 436
Reply with quote  #8 
Check it out:

http://blog.chron.com/lazygardener/2009/09/no-blooms-try-beating-your-plant/

I've heard it also done to thicken the trunk.

__________________
============================
[B]Figaro Zone 10b - South Florida[/I]
Growing: Black Mission, Strawberry Verte, LSU Hollier, LSU Purple, LSU Scotts Black, Cajun Gold, Panachee, Excel, UCR 291-4, UCR 143-36, Violette de Bordeaux, Ronde de Bordeaux, Calvert,  Black Madeira, Col De Dame Blanc
Wish List:
 CdDN, CdDG, Ischia Black, Galicia Negra
============================
jtp

Registered:
Posts: 980
Reply with quote  #9 
If you bang it enough to loosen the bark and/or make fissures, it will thicken as it heals. Risky though, as you create points of entry for pests and disease.
DallasFigs

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 990
Reply with quote  #10 
Quote:
Originally Posted by jdarden1963
Well, I've never heard of anyone beating a fig tree to make it more tolerant of the cold winters but when I was growing up, my grandmother would use a ladder to climb up the tree and beat the limbs with a stick or shake the limbs to knock off the figs she couldn't reach. 


Ha...she did that for pecans toIo! Or have me climb the tree and shake the limb.

__________________
James - Irving, TX - Zone: 8a

Follow me on EBay

Wish List: 187-25 · Ice Crystal · Maltese Beauty · Maltese Falcon
elin

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 1,271
Reply with quote  #11 
hey Figaro
"seasonal beatings" -LOL-
I have seen in an article that girdling has a dwarfing effect and inhibits height growth,.
if that confers the tree a better and stronger bark layer above the girdle so it should be tried.
http://www.hortwatch.com/library/trunk-girdling.html

" Girdling offers an alternative to dwarfing rootstocks for higher density plantings and there are a number of examples of intensively planted blocks on vigourous rootstocks being successfully held in check by regular girdling each year."

what does cold hardiness depend upon? bark diamter and ratio to cambium?

i am not a botanist so got know idea... next step is to try to cover only the area below the girdle in cold areas and try if it helps.
i wouldnt try the cutting of the bark but first try constricting it by a plastic or metal  wire...

__________________
Eli ,Israel ,Zone 10? Too humid and hot, yada yada yada
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1298814119
Growing
: Sbayi, Hmadi, Black Portugal, Black Brazil,Excell, Flanders, Hmari , RDB, Niagra Black,Natalina, CDDN,Maya, Preto Torres, Preto Arge
musillid

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 1,507
Reply with quote  #12 
I have heard about beating trees in late winter, but that was maple trees to get the sap going.
__________________
Dale
non compost mentis in Zone 6a
genecolin

Registered:
Posts: 1,542
Reply with quote  #13 
Danny I don't know exactly how you flail okra but on your word I beat the tar out of mine this morning. They are way past due in producing, I hope it works. Some of them I beat a little to hard and broke them, but what does it matter if they don't produce.

On another note, I had a Celeste that would only bear small marble size figs. After a few years I pruned it down with the thought of putting the chain saw to the rest. Things happen and I never got around to finishing the job. The next year, same thing, small figs. I pruned all I could cut with the lopers and was gonna use the chain saw. Again something got in the way. Follow year tree grew nicely and produced some very nice figs and has since. I didn't beat it but it was brutal.

"gene"

__________________
From the bayou,
"gene"

zone 9
Houma, La.
musillid

Avatar / Picture

Registered:
Posts: 1,507
Reply with quote  #14 
That's funny Gene. It reminds me of a Cattleya-type orchid I had that simply would not bloom. I threatened it with extinction and still nothing. then one day a little cherry head parrot I had made a salad out of it. When that Cattleya recovered, it bloomed like crazy.
__________________
Dale
non compost mentis in Zone 6a
Previous Topic | Next Topic
Print
Reply