garden_whisperer
Registered:1353347580 Posts: 1,613
Posted 1415193285
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#1
Living in zone 6 illinois i am always on the look out for cold hardy figs and fruit in general to grow unprotected in my yard. when i got into figs about 5 to 6 years ago i really didnt know much about them or that there where so many. in my quest to find true cold hardy figs i spent many hours on the net and forums of alot of diff gardening sites. guess what i found nothing other than this guy saying this one is good here or that one is good there. so i sat out on a mission not only to find the cold hardy figs but to also promote the cold hardy figs (people who live around me dont know what a fig is). so the only way i could do this was to plant diff knds of figs and sit back and wait to see what happends. in the years past my hardy chicago was my prize tree, never dieing back and producing great crops. this all changed with last winters polar vortex. the tree was compleatly top killed to the ground and didnt resprout until mid aug. i was kinda disapointed. every one of my in ground tree was top killed, every one of my potted trees sadly did not make it. some in ground did not make it at all. here is a list of the trees i lost. VdB (potted in unheated greenhouse) albique patete (potted in unheated greenhouse) connies light (potted in unheated greenhouse) purple havasue unknown (potted in unheated greenhouse) black bethlehem (in ground) osborne proliffic (in ground) now enough with the sadness of loss. the first ripe fig i got this year was lattarola in its second year it was very good. i guess to sum it all up the ones that came back after the harsh winter and still gave a great crop of fruit are listed in order from most productive in terms of ripeing fruit. connies dark was loaded with figs and gave me a good 2 dozen large ripe ones. MvsB much the sme as connies really loaded with fruit but was smaller than connies and riped a little later on. Latarola this tree really surprised me only 2 foot tall in its second year and still this little multi branched/ truck guy gave me the first figs of the season and ended up giving about 2 dozen. brown turkey this tree gave me about 10 very large fruits. Adriatic this tree bumped up with growth like crazy and was loaded with figs but only a handful got ripe. blue Celeste to my surprize this guy gave me ripe fruit and about a dozen fruits with more than 10 combined foot of growth. Sal's G this guy was my fav fig last year. he grew back but gave only one ripe fruit before frost came. Hardy chicago not one ripe fig this year from two trees. RdB alot of growth and loaded with figs but none riped before frost. all these trees where grown unprotected in ground. this winter to be tested are; nordland Violetta Bayerfeinge lsu hollier the nero 600 and condria had to be babied a little bit so they didnt go in ground. they will are indoors under grow lights until spring . I hope this info can help those living in cooler zones find a fig that can work for them. i will keep looking and posting my findings. pictured here from left to right is MvsB, Connies Dark, and Brown turkey.
__________________ Dave Zone 6b Illinois "Be the change you wish to see in the world"
greg88
Registered:1359498953 Posts: 800
Posted 1415194033
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#2
Thanks for the information, lots of us looking for cold hardy figs
__________________ Greg North West Arkanasas Zone 6b Wish list: any SPECTACULAR cold hardy figs, and/or perhaps a Niagra Bl., Laradek EBT, Kathleen's Bl, Hunt, a great UNK or anything anyone wants me to have???
rafaelissimmo
Registered:1335639347 Posts: 1,473
Posted 1415194938
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#3
Thank you for this helpful information. Is there a reason you do not protect your in ground figs? Or put a heater in the greenhouse? I realize protecting is a pain in the neck but it prevents heartache later...
__________________ Zone 7b, Queens, New York
garden_whisperer
Registered:1353347580 Posts: 1,613
Posted 1415195338
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#4
To find the cold Hardy figs, will be protecting a few this winter. The potted figs I list where in the greenhouse . I am working on making the greenhouse a year round operation.
__________________ Dave Zone 6b Illinois "Be the change you wish to see in the world"
jdsfrance
Registered:1376988473 Posts: 2,591
Posted 1415198056
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#5
Hi garden_whisperer, You've lost the osborn ! I just planted one this year. I'll figure out how it fairs here. I'll put some winter protection on mine - see my post on winterprotections - the 80 liters trashcan method . Did you protect yours ?
__________________ ------------------------
Climate from -25°C to + 35°C
Only cold hardy figtrees can make it here
Ampersand
Registered:1389979527 Posts: 728
garden_whisperer
Registered:1353347580 Posts: 1,613
Posted 1415232138
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#7
Nah I didn't pinch, trying to find hue cold Hardy figs that require nothing extra to get a crop. Now as a said I will be protecting a few and pinching next spring and summer. To see what figs need little or no care in cooler zones
__________________ Dave Zone 6b Illinois "Be the change you wish to see in the world"
sppsp
Registered:1373989212 Posts: 738
Posted 1415281344
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#8
Dave, this is great topic. Thanks for sharing the info. It is useful to me since I am also zone 6B.
__________________Shailesh, Pennsylvania, zone 6BDon't judge a fig tree by it's tag, just judge it by it's fig
nycfig
Registered:1380768118 Posts: 884
Posted 1415282930
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#9
Very nice work, Dave. I have property in Z5a, NY state. Trials like this really help me out as I hope to have figs growing on the property one day. Starting next year with a few varieties.
__________________ Danny NYC Z7a It's all about the figs!Facebook: NYCfigs Buying Fig Trees and Cuttings From the Internet
musillid
Registered:1327758167 Posts: 1,507
Posted 1415550688
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#10
You bring us hope.
__________________ Dale
non compost mentis in Zone 6a