| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > In ground and unprotected fig trees for zone 6a/5b |
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Oshawaman
Registered: Posts: 25 |
Hello everyone!I'm new at growing figs but two years ago I decided to buy a couple of trees that were being offered locally:one Hardy Chicago and a Brown Turkey.I overwintered them successfully in my basement and last May I bought two more of the same varieties and planted them all outside and they took off like wild fire.HCs are now over 1.5m and the BTs are a little bit shorter.We've had a cold winter with temps around -20C so far and I've noticed a bit of damage on the BTs but otherwise the wood is still green.I hope they make it through the rest of the winter since I gave them no protection whatsoever.I knew I was taking a chance but they weren't that expensive.Anyway, I'd like to try different varieties like Florea,Laradek Brown Turkey,Marseilles VS Black and Blue Celeste and others that you think or know do well in this climate.I live within 1Km of Lake Ontario so I believe I'm closer to a zone 6a than 5b.Any help or info on this topic is appreciated.Thank you. |
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yquemandfigs
Registered: Posts: 58 |
welcome to the forum manny |
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Oshawaman
Registered: Posts: 25 |
Thank you for the welcome John.I'm keeping my fingers crossed... |
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sammy
Registered: Posts: 261 |
Welcome to the forum Manny. |
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Tonycm
Registered: Posts: 922 |
Manny, I'm trying an experiment too. I have an unknowns that I'm leaving completely exposed to the elements. Post your results, there'll be some interest in.the outcome. |
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ascpete
Registered: Posts: 1,942 |
Hello Manny, |
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daveturpin
Registered: Posts: 78 |
Hey Manny - I'm pretty close (in PTBO), so I'm really interested in hearing about the results of your experiment! Welcome and be sure to keep us updateds. I'm kinda new to this, and my plants are pretty small, so I don't have much to share yet - but I should by next year. Good to see someone else close by. :) |
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Oshawaman
Registered: Posts: 25 |
Thank you everyone for the welcome and suggestions.I'll let the community know how my experiment is going. |
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baust55
Registered: Posts: 497 |
keep us updated . |
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pino
Registered: Posts: 2,117 |
Hi Manny |
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Centurion
Registered: Posts: 810 |
I will now stop sniveling about our temp lows in the mid 20's. |
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queuetue
Registered: Posts: 5 |
It'll be -30C (-22f) here by the end of the week. Good luck getting a truck battery that won't split open, let alone a fig tree that will survive in the ground! |
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susieqz
Registered: Posts: 971 |
hiya, manny. i'm in 6a but ive read lots about microclimates. i've enclosed an area with a 6' high wood fence which theoreticly should |
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OttawanZ5
Registered: Posts: 2,551 |
Pino is right stating |
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mgginva
Registered: Posts: 1,856 |
Welcome and good luck. |
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Oshawaman
Registered: Posts: 25 |
Thank you for your suggestions...I did leave them unprotected last year and they died back to the ground when we had a couple of nights in February around minus 21 C or so and winds at 90 km/h.This year I barely protected them(two with burlap and tarp and the other only with a tarp).Hopefully they'll make it through...I think I'll keep protecting them for the next 2 or 3 years and then probably try again...It's probably a losing battle but you never know until you try it and see it for yourself.I'd never expose any rare varieties to this unless I had extras and I knew they were fairly "hardy". |
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pino
Registered: Posts: 2,117 |
Sounds like you are protecting them! |
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garden_whisperer
Registered: Posts: 1,613 |
I'm in zone 6b and outside unprotected here I have rdb, hardy chicago, mvsb, sals g, adriatic (does get some winter damage) I am happy to say that I have a nordland rooted that will be joining them in spring along with others. |
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Oshawaman
Registered: Posts: 25 |
Wow!Never thought RdB would be hardy to Z6.Dave, obviously you are doing everything right.Do you protect them during the first few years, prune them every 5/6 leaves,etc...?Let us know how you do it please.We are now having very cold temps in the Toronto, Ontario area(around -18C/0F).What about you in your area?Half a zone can really make a difference... |
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garden_whisperer
Registered: Posts: 1,613 |
Our temps here are crazy a few weeks in the 20s a day or two poping up in the 50s then a a fewdays below zero. This is the midwest winters. Now on my rdb I have noticed dieback on the thin sucker like branches. Don't see any damage on the larger though I must say to gift cuttings I have trimmed them to a node or two above soil line, about 6 inches to a foot. I am planning to not cut it back as far in the future. Another thing is I my bed. Tilled very loose and deep with lotsa compost and wood chips tilled in and top dressed with a few inches of compost and cypris mulch. Theroy being the roots will go deeper and wider with ease. Now rdb is a very fast grower and by the end of next season it will be atleast 6 foot tall again. |
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