Had a comp day today so i decided i would take care of those pesky rootings that are going nuts in my starter box.
First I built this. I'm kind of proud. Two tiers for future expansion. Came out well and only cost me the plastic trash bags and a light bulb. Most of the wood came from an old project and is already thick with polyurethane. The rest i had laying around from other bits.
It's not fully operational, but should get these guys into a 1 gal pot. I'll have to stay on top of the humidity level. I realized this is similar to building an egg incubator. Temp/Humidity/light control. The bulb in the bottom is a 100w light bulb for heat until i can get a proper heating pad in there... unless this works well. I think i will need more light, too. Using a 24" aquatic grow bulb, but it's all i have at the time. I really had to get the cuttings out. I will eventually go to high output LEDs with a variable spectral mix to tune the color output to the plan requirements.
I left a space at the bottom for adding heat, humidifier and control systems via an arduino micro controller. A future project. apparently my ability to build the box is greater than my ability to photograph it. The plastic is secured with blue painter's tape- i am concerned about humidity with that tape, but i will get some 100mph tape on it soon.
Now for the figs. I used 1 pt coir/one pt perlite/one part potting soil/one part orchid mix. holds water well without being soggy.
One of my rootings is growing a tiny fig. should i remove it? seems like a lot of energy would be expended on it.
I read somewhere on this forum that a red bud might indicate a specific cultivar. I cant find that info again anywhere. The photo kind of whitewashes the red. Any ideas?
I have 21 unknown cuttings from six or seven separate trees. So far, 14 have rooted, six are looking good and one i am nursing through a fungal attack. Here's the inside. Thanks again for all the help. I can't express just how helpful this forum has been in my foray into the secret world of figs.
johnny
tinyfish
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Posts: 223
Looks really good. I would remove the fig to give the plant more energy.
johnny_k
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Posts: 46
Thanks. Gone.
SteveP
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I always remove any fruit from a tree that is in its first or second season. I want all the energy going toward roots and limbs.
johnny_k
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Posts: 46
Thanks Steve. I wouldn't have thought to go through the second year, but i can see how that would help the roots, though it seems like a difficult job, chasing own all those little figs.
What about leaves? At least at this point. All the figs have roots- from a few hairs to some pretty big clumps.