I want to buy some Beneficial Nematodes for my fig tree pots, because I found some root maggots. Would that to be a good idea? Would the Beneficial Nematodes end up in the fruit itself too? I just uppot my fig trees to really big pots and fresh soil. For some reason they were flies all over my top soil and the next thing I know I have some white weird worms... Another of my concern is that I think that fig trees don't like to be wet all the time. I usually let the pot dry out a little bit before warning it. What's your thoughts? Thank you sir.
I would have expected that you told that one shouldnt water the leaves.. instead the watering hose head must be as close to the ground as possible to actually water the roots and not leaves.
@@Gardenfundamentals1 Still given a choice, I think that it's a best practice to not water overhead, but really close to roots. May be not all plants are so sensitive about it..for example kale that's near impossible to wet.. to leaves like tomato/mint, that get pretty wet on rain or overhead watering. The mint I have, gets powdery mildew 2-3 days after heavy rains and one foilar spray of cold pressed neem oil kills it overnight. Btw great article on neem oil on the gardenfundamentals blog. Have been using it for years but didn't realize about the active compound. The brand that I have been using is 100% undiluted and cold pressed and hence it was working the way it did (i.e. awesome). I can swear by it for powdery mould and aphids infestation and works like miracle
@@tubeuser0180 Neem oil (cold pressed, organic) is the best thing ever! I used it a lot of time with great results, except it's gotten to be very expensive now, available only on-line but in small amounts. It worked wonders on the red Lillie beetle larvae.
Wow. The criteria of when to water makes sense. I have been doing it wrong.
Love your channel! You provide good helpful information. I do a lot of the things you mentioned so I’m on the right track.
Thanks for giving very practical tips and very well explained
Once again a very informative video. Thank you 😊👍
Thank you for this enormous wealth of knowledge!!!
Another wonderful, informative video!! Thank you!!!
Very informative.
Could you please make a video about Beneficial Nematodes?
nice one
What do you think of watering the hole a couple/ few times before you plant?
I want to buy some Beneficial Nematodes for my fig tree pots, because I found some root maggots.
Would that to be a good idea?
Would the Beneficial Nematodes end up in the fruit itself too?
I just uppot my fig trees to really big pots and fresh soil. For some reason they were flies all over my top soil and the next thing I know I have some white weird worms...
Another of my concern is that I think that fig trees don't like to be wet all the time. I usually let the pot dry out a little bit before warning it.
What's your thoughts?
Thank you sir.
no.
How would you transplant oh i don't know a garden phlox from one place to another. 🙏
I recommend roughing it up with a hand soil cultivator and prune the long roots close to the ball. The roots with branch out and it’s a quick process.
I would have expected that you told that one shouldnt water the leaves.. instead the watering hose head must be as close to the ground as possible to actually water the roots and not leaves.
I don't think it matters. Water dries off leaves very quickly. Leaves need to be wet for something like 7 hours for fungal spores to infect them.
@@Gardenfundamentals1
Still given a choice, I think that it's a best practice to not water overhead, but really close to roots.
May be not all plants are so sensitive about it..for example kale that's near impossible to wet.. to leaves like tomato/mint, that get pretty wet on rain or overhead watering.
The mint I have, gets powdery mildew 2-3 days after heavy rains and one foilar spray of cold pressed neem oil kills it overnight.
Btw great article on neem oil on the gardenfundamentals blog. Have been using it for years but didn't realize about the active compound. The brand that I have been using is 100% undiluted and cold pressed and hence it was working the way it did (i.e. awesome). I can swear by it for powdery mould and aphids infestation and works like miracle
@@tubeuser0180 Neem oil (cold pressed, organic) is the best thing ever! I used it a lot of time with great results, except it's gotten to be very expensive now, available only on-line but in small amounts. It worked wonders on the red Lillie beetle larvae.
Show us your females 😁