| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Phoenix fig varieties rising from the ashes |
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Sas
Registered: Posts: 1,363 |
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OldOneEye
Registered: Posts: 42 |
There is some good work on logging the qualities of cold hardy figs you can find here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1ihfyIwZ8l5DyVMFvTOAthQf65jn-2bRRMPGR57AKSyw/edit?usp=sharing |
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Jodi
Registered: Posts: 343 |
Wow that is an amazing spreadsheet. Thank you for sharing this. Warmly, Jodi |
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GregMartin
Registered: Posts: 550 |
That's Kelby's spreadsheet. He got banned a while back from here, but he's still a great contributor over on Ourfigs.com |
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FigColt
Registered: Posts: 73 |
[QUOTE]
Why was he banned? |
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rcantor
Registered: Posts: 5,724 |
Hardy Chicago will die to the ground and still produce plenty of good figs every year. You have to bury a lot of wood when you plant it. I comes back from wood buried deeply enough so it doesn't freeze. |
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chucklikestofish
Registered: Posts: 1,316 |
[QUOTE=Sas] I keep reading about fig trees growing back from beneath the soil after a total freeze. Of those varieties that get killed to ground level, which ones tend to come back and produce in the same season especially in cold areas? I've noticed that when I heavily trimmed some of my trees this past spring, some varieties grew with a vengeance but did not produce at all. As an example, Ronde de Bordeaux which produced the previous year did not produce any fruit this past season. Perhaps we could create a log of inground figs that tend to come back and produce immediately.[/QUOTE]~i don't know the answer but,my vdb and desert king produced last year and nothing this year ~and they were sheded for winter no die back at all ???? |
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Sas
Registered: Posts: 1,363 |
Not sure if my theory is valid. But I do believe that certain varieties especially when in pot take better to pruning than others by continuing to produce as expected such as what Bob described above with his hardy Chicago(dies to the ground but still produces the same year), while others tend to concentrate their energy into regrowth, and hence not producing as expected or missing the season altogether. |
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SCfigFanatic
Registered: Posts: 469 |
I get a couple small trees that usually die back in winter. |
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Rewton
Registered: Posts: 1,946 |
When growing figs in pots there is also the issue of whether the tree is rootbound. When I have had poor performance (as I had this year with some varieties like VdB) it seems to correlate with needing to be potted up. |
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Sas
Registered: Posts: 1,363 |
I have a feeling that with many varieties, I might have to keep increasing the size of container (which might not practical due to space restriction) or put in ground, rather than root pruning. Thanks |
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jdsfrance
Registered: Posts: 2,591 |
Hi, |
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