| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > my brown turkey |
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papayamon
Registered: Posts: 284 |
ok, this is my one fig i started with last year. i bought it as a little plant locally, then set her out in the beginning of september. i left for texas from oct to may, and when i came back, she had frozen to the ground but was beginning to come back from the roots. she did have drip irrigation the whole time. i fertilized. the grass was aggressivly closing in, so i rounduped about 2 weeks ago, and she's grown 6 inches at least since then. that's a yardstick for reference. |
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papayamon
Registered: Posts: 284 |
the figs here have been there for 2 months, i'l bet. are not growing at all, and are white and fibrous inside. |
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xgrndpounder
Registered: Posts: 810 |
Hi Mike, |
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papayamon
Registered: Posts: 284 |
no, i didn't cover them. to use roundup - you have to use a coarse spray with a VERY WEAK stream. you cannot get even a bit of mist on your plants or it will kill them deader than a doornail. you have to wait for no wind and you have to have a dedicated sprayer for roundup. that stuff is death in a bottle, and the slightest mistake means you have no plant. |
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xgrndpounder
Registered: Posts: 810 |
HAHA |
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papayamon
Registered: Posts: 284 |
i really believe i can get all my figs to grow like this. the drip irrigation makes a big difference. i'll be more careful with my new figs to better manage them this time around. this one came out ok in spite of neglect, rather than because of proper care. |
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papayamon
Registered: Posts: 284 |
what the heck, here's a shot of my front pasture. i'm going right down the middle of these other 2 rows with another row of figs :). |
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Dieseler
Registered: Posts: 8,252 |
Nice, |
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papayamon
Registered: Posts: 284 |
i really believe it helps your plant to have it freeze off above ground. clears the fmv on the new growth and also gives the plant a respite from nematodes (at least this is my conjecture). so i will clip all my figs close to the ground yearly (except the king) and take cuttings so i can beat jack frost to the punch. i'll get a ton of cuttings off this tree alone :). my friends and family sure won't lack for fig trees :). |
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papayamon
Registered: Posts: 284 |
man i have got lots of projects out here! when i get back from texas, i'm going to put in a big green/shade house, an outdoor hydro unit, and a tissue culture lab. i'm gonna do a little hobby horticulture. however, i don't think there is any money in figs. it's too much work for far too small an audience. bananas and grapes and houseplants are a much bigger biz. still i don't think i'll ever do more than break even. else why would so many nurseries be biting the dust all the time? it's a labor intensive low yield business, just like everything else in farming. i make my living as an rn, becoming a nurse practitioner - but even that i'm scaling back to low stress job. |
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Dieseler
Registered: Posts: 8,252 |
Mike you took the words right outta my mouth when you said this.
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papayamon
Registered: Posts: 284 |
this is today's pic. it's now got over 50 figs on it. i'm still hoping to taste on this year, but i've got my doubts on whether they'll actually ripen :). decent growth for 20 days since the last pic. i can't wait till all my figs are this size, i'm hoping next year. this was about the size of my natalina when i put it out last year. |
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Fatnsassytexan
Registered: Posts: 740 |
Papayamon, sure looks robust. I hope you get to taste some this year, however, it looks like it'll be gangbusters next year. Are you going to protect it somehow this winter? It must be hard when having to be away from home for work. I would have never thought you'd get that hard a freeze there, but what Bass told you makes sense. |
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papayamon
Registered: Posts: 284 |
i have too much stuff to protect. i consider that next year i'll start with a huge root system and i'm hoping it hits 10 feet. i can assure you i'll be pouring on the fertilizer :) and the drip will keep it growing. |
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