| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Newbie - how much water? |
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dolo918
Registered: Posts: 25 |
I have a brown turkey in a container. I would say it is about 6 mos - 1 year - bought from a nursery. It is in a 15 gal. pot. I am in zone 10 Florida. |
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javajunkie
Registered: Posts: 1,523 |
Good Morning and welcome to the forum! |
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jdsfrance
Registered: Posts: 2,591 |
Hi dolo918, |
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5fignut6
Registered: Posts: 53 |
put a tray under the container and water it from the bottom, filling the tray up. watch it dry up and water as needed. they take a lot of water |
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dolo918
Registered: Posts: 25 |
I did not pay attention to the standing water until today when I noticed it was funky looking. I used a turkey baster to empty the saucer. I have pea gravel in the bottom of the pot then mix with potting soil and compost. Tossed the bag so I am not sure. I am just confused by what I have been reading about water...too much ....to little. It is not showing any signs of wilt or stress. I have been watering every couple of days. |
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recomer20
Registered: Posts: 402 |
The "barely water" rule applies to cuttings and babies. And again, during harvest week--some figs split with too much watering. Once a plant has a suitable amount of roots and is actively growing with a decent amount of leafage, watering isn't a huge issue. Some cultivars prefer more or less water, but they'll let you know. Just try to make sure the pot drains well and doesn't stay soaked all the time or sit in standing water for so long that it rots. Once autumn comes, and trees go dormant ease off: without leaves and growth, the chance of overwatering is again an issue....that's if you are keeping everything in pots. |
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drphil69
Registered: Posts: 803 |
If your mix is good draining, its difficult to over water an "adult" tree, because there is always air available to the roots. It's cuttings and very young starts (4 months or so) that you have to watch how much water as it can cause/assist rot before the roots are established. |
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Rob
Registered: Posts: 550 |
In south florida heat I would say make sure you give it lots of water. Why not plant it in ground? Are you worried about nematodes? There are some folks here on this forum who live in south florida who might have some pointers on how to grow fig trees there. |
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dolo918
Registered: Posts: 25 |
I have it in our screen enclosure as I did not want to deal with all the animals we have here....squirrels, crows, birds, deer, etc....and then the dirt insects, nematodes....A lot of new growth in the planter so I am optimistic. Much improvement since I burned leaves with insecticide soap. |
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