Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think my digs are dead every year, and every year they come back. In very very cold years they have been killed down to the roots, but come back. That has happened twice in ten years. Give it until mid May before you give up hope.
I’m this pp. Fig is actually dead this year. RIP, old friend.
Cut it at an inch above the dirt. It'll send up new growth in a month.
How do you cut it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think my digs are dead every year, and every year they come back. In very very cold years they have been killed down to the roots, but come back. That has happened twice in ten years. Give it until mid May before you give up hope.
I’m this pp. Fig is actually dead this year. RIP, old friend.
Cut it at an inch above the dirt. It'll send up new growth in a month.
Anonymous wrote:I had a Chicago hardy fig in a big pot outside by a wall. It made me so happy to harvest small, sweet figs but... it did not survived last super cold winter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think my digs are dead every year, and every year they come back. In very very cold years they have been killed down to the roots, but come back. That has happened twice in ten years. Give it until mid May before you give up hope.
I’m this pp. Fig is actually dead this year. RIP, old friend.
Anonymous wrote:I think my digs are dead every year, and every year they come back. In very very cold years they have been killed down to the roots, but come back. That has happened twice in ten years. Give it until mid May before you give up hope.
Anonymous wrote:Mine has figs and looks very healthy.
Anonymous wrote:Mine has figs and looks very healthy.
Anonymous wrote:Figs are a warm weather tree.