| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Help! Figs not sprouting |
| Author | Comment |
|
dfoster25
Registered: Posts: 723 |
Hello: |
|
dfoster25
Registered: Posts: 723 |
Oh, & this is why I still claim the "Newbie Title" by the way. |
|
garden_whisperer
Registered: Posts: 1,613 |
I would take roots over green growth at a cutting level any day of the week. i have some cuttings with sprouts and no roots and some as you say with healthy roots and no sprouts. as long as the roots are alive you will get sprouts in due time. some just may take awhile. |
|
Chivas
Registered: Posts: 1,675 |
My Maltese Falcon stalled like this since about end of november and it's finally slowly sprouting, I just left it and kept watering it, I don't know if it will keep growing but I just left it out in the light with the rest of the figs. If you scratch the side of the cutting slight with your finger nail then you can see if it's still green, which I bet it is and if those buds never beak there should be some dormant buds that will come out. |
|
Dieseler
Registered: Posts: 8,252 |
[QUOTE=dfoster25]Hello: |
|
jenniferarino83
Registered: Posts: 1,076 |
I agree with Martin, leave it alone and stop smothering the poor thing silly :-) |
|
bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
did i mention my Socorro Black cutting didn't put out leaves till 4 months later? i'm surprised it's still alive. it was one of two tiny cuttings that i had so i didn't give up. i'll be pumping fertilizer this year and hope to get some figs off of it by next year. |
|
lukeott
Registered: Posts: 645 |
Dan, Looking at the pics everything looks fine, just need a lttle patience. The only thing that I don't like is that you left way to much of the cutting above the soil line. I can see where you started the roots in spag. moss, then you didn't use all of them. They just died off above the soil line. You really need to bury the cutting to the top node. Sometimes I even have the last node half under the soil. You don't get a bigger tree by having more cutting sticking out of the cup. I not saying you can't grow a cutting like you have it, just saying, give yourself better odds. You really need to find taller cups or container. The baggy's are cheap enough. I have some bags that I could send you if you want to try them, just let me know by pm or email. |
|
lukeott
Registered: Posts: 645 |
By the way, it's not to late to bury more of the cutting. |
|
dkirtexas
Registered: Posts: 1,327 |
I did scratch testing today on some cuttings I started in first week of September, still green, no leaves, don't know about roots, crazy, cuttings taken off the same limb, with same everything are 8" tall with 4-5 leaves! LSU figs are really crazy sometimes, some are great and some are really slow, no rhyme or reason to them. |
|
bullet08
Registered: Posts: 6,920 |
this one is Conadria Paradise Nursery. it's been in the bin for.. i don't remember. but i have 3 out of 36 cups that i moved that's not doing anything. i noticed it today while airing the bin. |
|
OttawanZ5
Registered: Posts: 2,551 |
I agree with the posts suggesting not to worry about the (no-) shoots if there are plenty of roots as is the case with your cutting. |
|
garden_whisperer
Registered: Posts: 1,613 |
ifferant cuttings root and shoot at differant times, even cuttings from the same tree. i have some sals c and sals g cuttings that some are rooted and leafy and some dont even have roots but bursting buds. others have roots and no top growth. |
|
Grasa
Registered: Posts: 1,819 |
5 in 200? that is fabulous... good for you! |
|
ascpete
Registered: Posts: 1,942 |
It looks fine, and the roots look good, IMO. |
|
ForeverFigs
Registered: Posts: 1,062 |
Question for Luke (lukeott). I'm new at this, so this question is not a challenge, but I'm just trying to clarify things in my own head. In your reply #9 you said that it's still not too late to burry the cutting deeper. I've always been told that when you transplant that you should never bury deeper than the original soil line, that it will damage or kill the plant. Does that problem only apply to more mature trees and not to cuttings? I have wanted to go deeper with some of my cuttings when transplanting from 32oz. deli cups to 1gal. pots. But I always hesitated to do so because of what I thought was the rule of thumb about soil line. Maybe Luke or some other members could help me out with this one. Thanks. |
|
dfoster25
Registered: Posts: 723 |
Just read all the response. Thanks for the advice. If there is one thing I've learned with figs, it's you have to have patience. They take their sweet time doing everything, but patience is not always a virtue I have. |
|
dfoster25
Registered: Posts: 723 |
Here's an update. |
|
TONYSAC
Registered: Posts: 1,031 |
Cut it in half get rid of the rot put it back in the moss and let it root again and way more roots then in the first photo you just posted like 10 times that amount bigger then a golf ball worth of moss stuck to the cutting and then pot it up into perlite soil mix with the moss stuck to it ...It looks way to wet for my IMO. |
|
FiggyFrank
Registered: Posts: 2,712 |
You might try adding more perlite to your mix once it roots. What is your ratio now? |
|
BLB
Registered: Posts: 2,936 |
Get Physan 20 and water with that for the mold, I do agree that with most everyone that leaving it and watering very very careful is a good way to go, but I also like your idea of putting it into a warmer location to see if that doesn't wake it up. Oh and it is very likely that you do have shoots under the soil that are advancing faster than the visible stagnent shoot |
|
OctopusInc
Registered: Posts: 341 |
I like to snip off the sprouts (and even the terminal bud) until roots form so the plant puts all of it's energy into roots rather than trying to develop leaves. If you do this though make sure you cover the spots you cut with grafting wax, otherwise it will commit energy to sealing the wound. |
|
ascpete
Registered: Posts: 1,942 |
Dan, |
|
Rob
Registered: Posts: 550 |
It is hard, but I try not to mess with it until I'm really sure it's ready to transplant. Popping it in and out of the pot every day to check the roots when it's still young could break roots, weaken the cutting, and encourage rot. |
|
lukeott
Registered: Posts: 645 |
Vince, When your starting cuttings the first thing you hope for is roots, because that's what feeds the plant. Doesn't always work that way, but you want to have the most possible chance for roots to grow. If you look closely at one of Dan's first pictures, he had roots growing near the top of the cutting. But when planted in short cup, the roots just died, instead of feeding the plant. You ask about planting and what is normal for other trees or bushes. Fig cutting are not the same. They do not have an established root ball that form into it's desire depth or a trunk. Once the cutting has taken enough to transplant into a larger container or ground, you can plant all of cutting if so desired, just leaving your new growth above soil level. If you look back in past post, you will see how some members do not like the shape from a single branch growing sideways. So when they transplanted, they buried it on it's side, so the branch is sticking straight up. I'm not very good at explaining with words, so hopefully I made sense. |
|
dfoster25
Registered: Posts: 723 |
I used a mix of Fafard 52 along with 50% perlite. So my guess would be it has about 60-70% perlite. |
|
dfoster25
Registered: Posts: 723 |
photo 1 shows what the figs look like in the tote Photo 2 shows how the tote is situated over the heat vent photo 3 is the tote covered with towels to trap heat photo 4 shows figs growing next to the window at the beginning of the growing stages. There are Hollier figs that are younger than the ones that are still sitting there in the dormant tote. Some of the Genoa figs were at this stage when they began wilting. Photo 5 shows my third and oldest tote full of leafed out figs. |
|
JackHNVA
Registered: Posts: 519 |
Looks fine, they do stall sometimes. If you are worried, sometimes the winter's effect in the coldness of the floor will affect the speed, so a 80 - 90 degree seedling heating mat under your tub/tote may help encourage wakening and snuggling of the babies! |
|
dfoster25
Registered: Posts: 723 |
I placed a thermometer in the plastic tote. The reading is 80 degrees. |
|
JoAnn749
Registered: Posts: 1,184 |
Dan, I've started my cuttings at the same time - Dec 22, all started in damp sp moss. A few rooted within 7 days, I waited for more roots and cupped on the 16th. there are some that haven't rooted yet and are still in sp moss. |
|
dfoster25
Registered: Posts: 723 |
http://figs4funforum.websitetoolbox.com/post/Tiny-Worms-4516006 |
|
vitalucky
Registered: Posts: 241 |
It seems to be caused by soil being too wet and at the same time it remains too cool. Too much water keeps the soil cold and it causes rot. I have had the same problem a few times. We are so afraid of drought that we drown our plants. |
|
dfoster25
Registered: Posts: 723 |
Thanks Sal. Ordinarily, I would agree. But those white worms are troubling me because I don't know what they are. I had healthy roots and top growth only to have this come in and take them out. Not happening on most of the other varieties. Yet! |
|
daveturpin
Registered: Posts: 78 |
Yeah fungus gnat larvae have a dark head, and a darker midline. I agree that it isn't that - at least from the pics. I have no idea... :P Hopefully someone can help out... |
|
Dieseler
Registered: Posts: 8,252 |
Few years back i was rooting in S.Moss and noticed those white wiggly things. |
|
Grasa
Registered: Posts: 1,819 |
I had similar. I was able to cut the damage area and start the rooting process again. I saved a few. I did not see these worms you have, but my cuttings were soft and something had eaten the middle core of the cutting. Sucks! that is all I can say. It sucks! |
|
|