We very grateful to be apart of the Iv Organic family can’t wait to help sponsor the Fig giveaway this coming February . What should we send this year ?
We have 14 fig trees, but would really like to have wild cuttings. I was raised on figs and love the taste. I'll contact The Fig Hunter for information. Thank you!
Hi, I need your help. I got 2 cans of IV Organic delivered. In the box I was offered 2 little branches of Fig (brown turkey and panache tiger). Which of your video (youtube) will show me how grow these 2 branches. I want to make it works. Should I keep the paper towel wrapped until I am ready to do it. Thank you.
Here are a couple helpful demos we taught on rooting your fig cuttings: ua-cam.com/video/T7QCs1HT6wk/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/m00Im3P-vH0/v-deo.html Thanks for making IV Organic a part of your 2024 growing successes! Happy Gardening, Charles
amazed at the many varieties of figs we have two fig trees green figs and dark red figs not sure the species of tree but really nice fruit. hello from Australia or G'day Mate ..
I would like to kindly get your advice about an issue Im facing. I grafted a De La Roca cutting on a Turkish Brown fig tree. The cutting grew with no issues. However when fruited, the figs became hard and fell off the tree before ripening. It's worth mentioning that when the figs started to fall, the weather was humid and the temperature was around 86°F. I would like to know what went wrong. Thank you,
Hello. I’ve just watched your planting of a Wonderful Pomegranate tree back in 2016. I’d love to see how the tree is doing now if possible. I’m in Australia and where we live is hard rock so digging is virtually impossible. We do have a pomegranate in a pot but with hot weather coming it dries out super quick. Any tips for growing trees in Australia would be greatly aappreciated
do you put bark mulch over the root base if no try this to shade the roots from the sun i also am from Australia and have trees in soil with good fruiting when in season , Victoria is nice climate and the fig trees are happy here too
So sorry am not him but he might not answer. I just wanted to tell you it really works excellent to place all your pots inside a little child plastic swimming pool or big saucer or bowl. If you do not do this the fertilizer all leaches away and especially the water. I can fit a lot of pots in a small kids swimming pool and I put them each on a brick to keep them draining well. The roots come out of the pots and it becomes kind of a hydroponic system as well. Nothing is wasted all is recycled. I was even able to put a male and female betta fish in the stagnant leach water in the pool and they thrived and bred. I sold baby Betta fish to the pet store. I now live in a climate too cold for betta to survive outdoors in winter so I gave that up. If you put the pots in a shallow pool you won't have to water or fertilizer hardly ever. I also kept the swimming pool on a balcony with an overhang so even if it rained it never filled the pool. Believe me the plants take from the pool or saucers. Once established you can just water the pool or saucers and they'll suck it up.
Hello, Mr. Malki. I need your help or the help of this room. But first I want to thank you for all your great videos that you have posted in the past which have helped me immensely. Here is my problem. I have an approximately a six-year-old Kadota fig tree. Its first two years were in a container with little to no fruit. Now it's in the ground going on three years. It looks very healthy it has three trunks the size of baseball bats and as of this date its full of figs. I have it mulched, water it deeply twice a week and fertilize twice a year spring and late summer. when you look at my tree it's the picture of health. But my fruit will not ripen. They simply dry up and wilt on the branches. When I cut them open, they are dry with no color at all. I was hopeful last week when I picked one and it was ripe and moist inside, but one fig in three years? I live in Hemet area code 92544 and my summers are hot and my winters can be cool with some frost warnings. If I can't solve this problem, I feel I will have to get rid of it. If you need further information, just ask. Sincerely Frank.
I’m a neighbor of yours up in Yucca Valley. I had a similar thing going on with my brown turkey fig this spring, and it turned out to be black fig flies. Nearly every fig by the time it failed would have a tiny round hole or two in it, and inside I often found one or more little white maggot. My solution was to cover all the rest of the developing fruit with organza bags as soon as the fruit was big enough to attach a bag to. That seemed to take care of the problem, or maybe it was just an early summer phenomenon that resolved on its own, who knows. Of course your problem may be entirely different (and may have resolved itself by now), but do look for those little round escape holes on your next failed fig.
Shop www.TheFigHunter.shop/ products & save 10% using promocode: IVO10
We very grateful to be apart of the
Iv Organic family can’t wait to help sponsor the Fig giveaway this coming February .
What should we send this year ?
Hello T.F.H are you offering the fig sample box on your website?
@@hickorys_tiny_farm4861 we will be
@@TheFigHunter awesome , I look forward to trying these verities
Can't wait for February the 1st 2023 !!!
We have 14 fig trees, but would really like to have wild cuttings. I was raised on figs and love the taste. I'll contact The Fig Hunter for information. Thank you!
Great video Charles! Thanks for sharing!
Hi, I need your help. I got 2 cans of IV Organic delivered. In the box I was offered 2 little branches of Fig (brown turkey and panache tiger). Which of your video (youtube) will show me how grow these 2 branches. I want to make it works. Should I keep the paper towel wrapped until I am ready to do it. Thank you.
Here are a couple helpful demos we taught on rooting your fig cuttings: ua-cam.com/video/T7QCs1HT6wk/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/m00Im3P-vH0/v-deo.html
Thanks for making IV Organic a part of your 2024 growing successes!
Happy Gardening,
Charles
Very cool. Think I’ll get grafting this year to have access to more varieties. 🙂
Would love cuttings from these.
amazed at the many varieties of figs we have two fig trees green figs and dark red figs not sure the species of tree but really nice fruit. hello from Australia or G'day Mate ..
I live in Karachi Pakistan I like your comments
I would like to kindly get your advice about an issue Im facing. I grafted a De La Roca cutting on a Turkish Brown fig tree. The cutting grew with no issues. However when fruited, the figs became hard and fell off the tree before ripening. It's worth mentioning that when the figs started to fall, the weather was humid and the temperature was around 86°F. I would like to know what went wrong.
Thank you,
Hello. I’ve just watched your planting of a Wonderful Pomegranate tree back in 2016. I’d love to see how the tree is doing now if possible. I’m in Australia and where we live is hard rock so digging is virtually impossible. We do have a pomegranate in a pot but with hot weather coming it dries out super quick. Any tips for growing trees in Australia would be greatly aappreciated
do you put bark mulch over the root base if no try this to shade the roots from the sun i also am from Australia and have trees in soil with good fruiting when in season , Victoria is nice climate and the fig trees are happy here too
So sorry am not him but he might not answer. I just wanted to tell you it really works excellent to place all your pots inside a little child plastic swimming pool or big saucer or bowl. If you do not do this the fertilizer all leaches away and especially the water. I can fit a lot of pots in a small kids swimming pool and I put them each on a brick to keep them draining well. The roots come out of the pots and it becomes kind of a hydroponic system as well. Nothing is wasted all is recycled. I was even able to put a male and female betta fish in the stagnant leach water in the pool and they thrived and bred. I sold baby Betta fish to the pet store. I now live in a climate too cold for betta to survive outdoors in winter so I gave that up. If you put the pots in a shallow pool you won't have to water or fertilizer hardly ever. I also kept the swimming pool on a balcony with an overhang so even if it rained it never filled the pool. Believe me the plants take from the pool or saucers. Once established you can just water the pool or saucers and they'll suck it up.
Wonderful furits sir
Hello, Mr. Malki. I need your help or the help of this room. But first I want to thank you for all your great videos that you have posted in the past which have helped me immensely. Here is my problem. I have an approximately a six-year-old Kadota fig tree. Its first two years were in a container with little to no fruit. Now it's in the ground going on three years. It looks very healthy it has three trunks the size of baseball bats and as of this date its full of figs. I have it mulched, water it deeply twice a week and fertilize twice a year spring and late summer. when you look at my tree it's the picture of health. But my fruit will not ripen. They simply dry up and wilt on the branches. When I cut them open, they are dry with no color at all. I was hopeful last week when I picked one and it was ripe and moist inside, but one fig in three years? I live in Hemet area code 92544 and my summers are hot and my winters can be cool with some frost warnings. If I can't solve this problem, I feel I will have to get rid of it. If you need further information, just ask. Sincerely Frank.
I’m a neighbor of yours up in Yucca Valley. I had a similar thing going on with my brown turkey fig this spring, and it turned out to be black fig flies. Nearly every fig by the time it failed would have a tiny round hole or two in it, and inside I often found one or more little white maggot. My solution was to cover all the rest of the developing fruit with organza bags as soon as the fruit was big enough to attach a bag to. That seemed to take care of the problem, or maybe it was just an early summer phenomenon that resolved on its own, who knows. Of course your problem may be entirely different (and may have resolved itself by now), but do look for those little round escape holes on your next failed fig.
this is amazing!
Nice video !
Yummy😋 ❣️
eats corazon de bahia and just moved on to the next one...