| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > How many years? |
| Author | Comment |
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lisascenic
Registered: Posts: 121 |
I've been wondering how long it will take for my baby figs to produce edible fruit. |
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satellitehead
Registered: Posts: 3,687 |
This will give you an idea of my luck: My in-ground figs started producing 1st or 2nd year always. I hope this helps. |
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rafed
Registered: Posts: 5,308 |
Figs have a mind of their own. |
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lisascenic
Registered: Posts: 121 |
Is it cloudy here? |
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lisascenic
Registered: Posts: 121 |
I forgot to add that I intend to plant these trees in the ground, but need to finish some house construction, first. |
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nkesh099
Registered: Posts: 863 |
Some of my first season's cuttings do produce 3 or 4 figs, as soon I see them they are taken off the tree. 2nd year, I'll let half of the figs to ripe and pick the other unriped half. After the 2nd season I'll let them keep their figs. As your tree ages it will produce more. For example, I get about 120 figs off my 3 yrs old trees and anywhere between 200-250 from my 4 yrs old tree. All kept in 20-25 gallon pots. Good luck Navid. |
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TucsonKen
Registered: Posts: 1,298 |
Many of my UCD cuttings last year got figs the same year they were rooted. I left one on each tree, just to see if any would mature. Almost none of them ripened, but I did get a small fig from the Violette de Bordeaux. The flavor wasn't anything to get excited about, but it was edible and I thought it was pretty neat that it fruited. This year, most of them look like they'll produce some figs. The most prolific so far is what I think is a Kadota--a cutting from a neighbor's tree, taken late in 2009. It got several figs in 2010 (mediocre flavor and most didn't ripen), but this year it has at least 25 and is growing like crazy, so I'm hoping at least a few will be good. |
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lisascenic
Registered: Posts: 121 |
So, it will take several years before I get figs worth eating? |
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TucsonKen
Registered: Posts: 1,298 |
Even though they weren't prime, I thought some of my early figs were still worth eating, and maybe you'll be luckier and have better varieties than I did. I've heard people say that some kinds, like LSU Purple, take several years to develop top flavor, so it stands to reason there must be others that get there quicker. But, it looks like you ought to plan on at least a couple of years. |
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lisascenic
Registered: Posts: 121 |
I've got a Desert King, a Grosse Monstrueuse and two different passalong figs, one from an old Italian garden in Oxidental CA, and one from a gentleman in Walnut Creek, CA. |
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