Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew figs for years, until a super cold winter killed the tree. I grow currents now, along with crab apples. I make a current-crab apple jelly that is very nice.
I planted native plums last year and got one plum. Hoping for 3 or 4 this year!
I would love to grow figs but I get eeked out about wasps? And parts of wasps that are in the fig? Someone talk me down.
There are no wasp parts in figs! I never noticed that there were more wasps around my figs than around super ripe peaches or raspberries. Wasps like sugar, and figs are sugary. One thing you can do is pick the figs at the right time and not leave them on the tree to get overripe and split. Then the wasps really do like them. I interact with more wasps at a park picnic table than I ever do at my fig tree.
Wrong.
Any fig that is pollinated will have a dead wasp inside. You don’t notice it because the wasps are tiny and digested by the time you eat the fruit.
And honey is bee breast milk. Sometimes it’s best not to overthink.
It’s a tiny fruit fly sized wasp fyi
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew figs for years, until a super cold winter killed the tree. I grow currents now, along with crab apples. I make a current-crab apple jelly that is very nice.
I planted native plums last year and got one plum. Hoping for 3 or 4 this year!
I would love to grow figs but I get eeked out about wasps? And parts of wasps that are in the fig? Someone talk me down.
There are no wasp parts in figs! I never noticed that there were more wasps around my figs than around super ripe peaches or raspberries. Wasps like sugar, and figs are sugary. One thing you can do is pick the figs at the right time and not leave them on the tree to get overripe and split. Then the wasps really do like them. I interact with more wasps at a park picnic table than I ever do at my fig tree.
Wrong.
Any fig that is pollinated will have a dead wasp inside. You don’t notice it because the wasps are tiny and digested by the time you eat the fruit.
And honey is bee breast milk. Sometimes it’s best not to overthink.
It’s a tiny fruit fly sized wasp fyi
Thank you - I was talked down then right back up then down again.
I have no problem eating a fruit fly sized bit of protein.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew figs for years, until a super cold winter killed the tree. I grow currents now, along with crab apples. I make a current-crab apple jelly that is very nice.
I planted native plums last year and got one plum. Hoping for 3 or 4 this year!
I would love to grow figs but I get eeked out about wasps? And parts of wasps that are in the fig? Someone talk me down.
There are no wasp parts in figs! I never noticed that there were more wasps around my figs than around super ripe peaches or raspberries. Wasps like sugar, and figs are sugary. One thing you can do is pick the figs at the right time and not leave them on the tree to get overripe and split. Then the wasps really do like them. I interact with more wasps at a park picnic table than I ever do at my fig tree.
Wrong.
Any fig that is pollinated will have a dead wasp inside. You don’t notice it because the wasps are tiny and digested by the time you eat the fruit.
And honey is bee breast milk. Sometimes it’s best not to overthink.
It’s a tiny fruit fly sized wasp fyi
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew figs for years, until a super cold winter killed the tree. I grow currents now, along with crab apples. I make a current-crab apple jelly that is very nice.
I planted native plums last year and got one plum. Hoping for 3 or 4 this year!
I would love to grow figs but I get eeked out about wasps? And parts of wasps that are in the fig? Someone talk me down.
There are no wasp parts in figs! I never noticed that there were more wasps around my figs than around super ripe peaches or raspberries. Wasps like sugar, and figs are sugary. One thing you can do is pick the figs at the right time and not leave them on the tree to get overripe and split. Then the wasps really do like them. I interact with more wasps at a park picnic table than I ever do at my fig tree.
Wrong.
Any fig that is pollinated will have a dead wasp inside. You don’t notice it because the wasps are tiny and digested by the time you eat the fruit.
Yup. This is why strict vegans do not eat figs.
My friend in Bethesda has a lot of success with persimmons, but I find them mushy and too sweet. Maybe the one plus side of climate change is that we will be able to grow more tropical fruits?