Thread: Figs
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Old 04-01-2012, 04:57 PM posted to rec.gardens.edible
Davej Davej is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Nov 2007
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Default Figs

On Dec 30 2011, 7:43*pm, Davej wrote:
On Dec 27, 8:04*pm, Jim Elbrecht wrote:









On Mon, 26 Dec 2011 08:28:10 -0800 (PST), Davej
wrote:


I have a patch of figs but I am never able to harvest more than a few
before the first frost hits. I am wondering what I could do that would
extend the growing season by about a month or two. I have heard of fig
trees but I have what looks like bushes. Every Spring it starts over.
I have heard stories from old-timers who claim their fathers would
slowly bend their fig tree over in the Fall and bury it with excellent
results. I am considering building a cold frame to get the roots
warmed up sooner this Spring. Any experts out there? Thanks.


Dave in STL


A friend in upstate NY [in a cold zone 5] had a 15'[?] fig tree that
he 'bent over and buried' every fall. * * He got a bushel or 2 of figs
every year.


He got sick and had to make some choices so last time I saw his garden
he had 3 4' fig trees in maybe 20 gallon planters. * *They were 3
years old and should produce at 4-5. * *He moved them into an unheated
attached garage for the winter. * *I don't know how that worked out..


Was it this group that someone posted the link to photos of the
Brooklyn fig tree?http://www.i-italy.org/4533/backyard-figs-brooklyn


Jim


Well, I would like to understand how this scheme works. Obviously
wrapping or burying the tree isn't going to keep it from freezing, so
then what does it do? Keep it moist? Keep it dry? Or what? I don't
have any hope of a tree at this point so what would an expert do with
this fig bush? Thanks.


As an update -- elsewhere on the web I have read that fig plants
prefer to be kept dry during the Winter, so I am going to construct a
plastic coldframe and try to keep them dry.