Most of the figs have a lot of brebas - little early figs resulting from overwintering buds. They have small tufts of leaves at the ends of branches.
I removed these Desert King saplings from the half-barrel that I had chili pepper plants in last year. I had stuck several King prunings into the growth medium late last winter and gave them no more care during the season than the other plants in the barrel had. Over the winter it looks like about 1/3 of the cuttings died of frost, but several remain. I repotted these two. The one on the left was very long, and I had pushed it in deeply. Most of the roots were at the lowest end of the cutting.
The Desert King fig tree has many many brebas now. I an reluctant to prune until after they ripen, mid to late summer.
Petite negri that I grew from a cutting and basically neglect. It has brebas as well. One of these days I want to find a permanent place in the ground for this tiny tree. It grows slowly - the parent took about 6 years to reach 6 foot tall.
The Sal's fig sapling that I haven't found a place to plant. Even though it was overwintered in an exposed setting, in container, it survived and has some brebas. It's only about a foot tall. It needs a place in the ground as well.
Thursday, May 03, 2012
Sunday, April 29, 2012
Mulberries
Just returned from 5 days in Chicago. Happy to be home. On inspection, many of the fruit trees are showing baby fruits now. The Illinois Everbearing Mulberry has now begun to leaf out, and there are embryonic mulberries on the branches. Or, those might be male flowers. Im not sure. It's still small, so I don't expect a lot.
Since there is not much to photograph here are some public domain botanical illustrations of mulberries.
According to wikipedia mulberries grow easily from large cuttings, so I stuck some prunings into the same large container that now has some tomato plants. That worked well last year for King figs. Since I'm growing this tree by the backyard orchard culture method, pruning to small size, open center, summer pruning, I'm in uncharted territory for this fruit. It will be nice to see how it does this year.
According to wikipedia mulberries grow easily from large cuttings, so I stuck some prunings into the same large container that now has some tomato plants. That worked well last year for King figs. Since I'm growing this tree by the backyard orchard culture method, pruning to small size, open center, summer pruning, I'm in uncharted territory for this fruit. It will be nice to see how it does this year.
Sunday, April 22, 2012
Today, more Spring
Apple Blossoms at Hood River Oregon
Saturday, April 21, 2012
Sping is completely here now.
Pics from today. I did manage to do a few things around the yard. The Spring flowers are in the second wave - daffodils are done, and now tulips blooming. Japanese plums and peaches are done and cherries are in full bloom, with early apples in bloom - North Pole and Liberty. Euro plum (Stanley) is in bloom. Grape hyacinths have started blooming, as are violets. Fig embryos are swelling, but no leaves yet. Mulberry buds are swelling. The last tart cherry's buds are starting to swell.The garlic tub is flourishing. So are the onion tubs. These were planted last fall.
Hollywood plum. I don't know yet if it will bear fruit this year. Shiro seems to have some swelling embryonic fruit, but it's way too early to be confident about that.
Stella cherry (white flowers) is amazing this year. It's covered. I did a good job pruning that one too. Being self complimentary there.
Violets are spreading, bit by bit. I need to help them along some more so they fill in and prevent weeds.
Organic weed killer. Not perfect, but it's implossible to do it all by hand now, and this helps. Plus, it doesn't disturb the mulch, so prevents more from sprouting. Plus it smells really good. It's made from citrus rinds.
Tanglefoot. I pulled off the old "collars" and put on new ones, mostly made from polyethylene mailers off junk mail, and some zip-lock bags, cut into long strips. Tie around the tree firmly. It's stretchy so doesn't interfere with bark growth. Then apply the tanglefoot. It helps a lot to keep the ants and aphids off the cherries, and keep the ants out of the figs. Ants in figs cause spoiling and loss of fruit, as well as giving them a nice crunchy texture. Ants bring aphids onto cherries, and can damage the crop as well as cause a lot of leaf damage.
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