Hardy Chicago. 2nd year in the ground. In Missouri. Got down super low. I cut the fig to 36 inches and put a wire cage around it and stuffed it with leaf mulch. Checked it out a day ago . dead at the top 1/2 inch where it was sticking out of the mulch. One inch below the mulch, it was green under the bark when scratched with my fingernail.
@RossRaddi11 ай бұрын
Well done.
@LittlePieceOfHeaven.6511 ай бұрын
I start reading your Blog last Summer and followed your advice with my 2 year old CH and 2 year old RDB both in ground for the first Winter. I did not cut back but wrapped and mulched them with leaves and stuffed pine needles in black yard bags around the root system . Checked both of them today and only the top inch is dead. We had -8 for about 5 days with -15 windchill. It pays off following a Pro's Advice ...thanks !
@CoopMauKona11 ай бұрын
Almost to 50k. Congrats. This channel has so much good content it's going to blow up one day.
@RossRaddi11 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@JoyoftheGardenandHome11 ай бұрын
@RossRaddi Reach out to Kevin @ EpicGardening. His reach is immense and can really propel you forward. I've already recommended he interview you.
@i5usko11 ай бұрын
I am zone 6a and I have persimmons that went through that little cold spell. I wrapped em and covered them with a trash can. Hoping they made it through. I bought some apricots for this spring because of your video. I hope they come out as good as yours when they fruit.
@petekooshian559511 ай бұрын
I'm in zone 6b in Michigan with a Chicago Hardy and it has survived two winters now without taking any significant damage. Still waiting on fruit, but it seems to be handling the temps just fine.
@roccoconte296011 ай бұрын
Nice video Ross love the winter reports. Cant waite to take them out of the cellar.
@paigeevelyn883 ай бұрын
I did practically nothing to protect my hardy chicago fig last winter, and it came back strong and is fruiting for the first time right now! I'm in Missouri.
@SarahLee-rs7ks3 ай бұрын
Wow!! I'm in MO too (Kansas City) and just looking into covering my first year Chicago Hardy. This is encouraging! What region are you in - in Missouri, may I ask?
@paigeevelyn883 ай бұрын
@@SarahLee-rs7ks I’m in St. Louis!
@itsasickness493911 ай бұрын
I can attest 1st hand that 20f can cause damage in Z9 Louisiana. We had that two weeks ago and I do see some damage but only on the ones that kept growing even past our first frost, Smith, I258, CDDB and Becnel’s Italian Black to name a few. I’m unsure of the severity because I’m new to figs but I guess I will know for sure in about a month.
@bungalobill79413 ай бұрын
In West Texas the regular cold weather really isn't the main threat. It is the mild winter temperatures we can get for long periods, the trees start to break dormancy, then here comes another freeze and it is game over. I need to find a variety that is much slower at coming out of dormancy. Someone said Ronde de Bordeaux was a good choice. My Texas Blue Giant will die back from freeze, but sends out new growth fast and still produces lots of figs.
@RossRaddi3 ай бұрын
I'm not certain some varieties wake up slower. More pruning will delay their wake up though.
@bungalobill79413 ай бұрын
@@RossRaddi Thanks. I am going to try a few different varieties and compare. I'm going to start with Desert King, RDB, Genovese Niro, Pastilliere, and maybe Olympian.
@youngbuck500911 ай бұрын
In Detroit 6a, I have a hardy Chicago that reliably survives winters with a tarp over top but the fruit is very boring. According to Big Bill, Makedonia Dark fruits well after dieback so I’m taking a stab at that variety. Also, if my Randino ends up being an early fig, I may try that in ground as well.
@joannazr7 күн бұрын
Ross. I am trying to understand. So if I bend and cover let's say 2 branches and rest of the bush is killed by frost these two branches with provide enought hormonal balance to prevent these vicious cycle of groving like a crazy, no fruit, killing by frost and regrowing. I live in Cleveland, Oh, zone 6B (it used to be 5) and after few years of this cycle gave up and dug whole thing up. But I like fruits.
@baneverything55805 ай бұрын
I had a 1st year fig tree in central Louisiana with multiple 3 ft branches in a spider pattern so I wrapped a thick plastic barrel with a thermal blanket and garbage bags and stuffed the branches inside it and piled pine straw up around the sides and then put a blanket over it. The tips of the branches were damaged but the tree lived and is huge this year...about 10 feet across already with fruits. My 1st year Celeste trees created from tissue culture were so oddly tiny when I planted them but they`re fruiting too and really growing well. I`ll cover them with tarps and put tiny 200w heaters under them if I have to. It keeps getting colder and colder each winter and it has been unusually cool this summer. Very odd. We had snow three times one year and we`ve had some ice and snow nearly every winter for 8 years straight. There have been record snow events into the summer in America this year too so we may be in for another bad winter.
@afrocraft111 ай бұрын
Thanks. Can anyone recommend some relatively small, cold-hardy fig trees with good fruit? I only have space for about 4 feet tall and wide. And do I need more than one tree for pollination?
@RossRaddi11 ай бұрын
You only need one. Little Ruby is very hardy and is the only fig tree I’ve ever grown that’ll stay that small.
@bobg536211 ай бұрын
Other than perhaps coastal California and southern Florida, where Mediterranean fig wasps have been imported and can survive the winters, figs grown in the US are never pollinated.
@odimarbatista397610 ай бұрын
Ross, let me start by thanking you for sharing your knowledge! So, zone 6b here in Metrowest Boston, Ma. Have been growing some apples, peaches, grapes and plums in my backyard for about 5 yrs. and becoming deeply enamored of the idea of growing figs. I gather from what you said is that, if you don’t want the branches to grow through fall only to perish in frigid temps, aside from insulating it and covering the tree, u want to do a little summer pruning? No less than a third?? Is that the approach? To allow it to lignify and still maintain the hormonal balance and fruit?? Do general pruning principles apply or are there specific techniques to apply in colder climates?? I thank you in advance!!
@RossRaddi10 ай бұрын
I only recommend summer pruning fig trees like that for really experienced commercial growers. Winter pruning if it has to be completed, must be done properly to avoid throwing the hormones into the wrong state.
@ppierodds11 ай бұрын
thx
@Abbasshahsso11 ай бұрын
Temperature here does not g beyond 1degrees Celsius only recently Heavy rain fell snow falls on the near mountain s .fros t fell heavily my 7 fig trees stayed on the roof top .leaves dried & most the night s wer 3r4degrees.,trim the trees in October.The weather stayed warmer between 16 degrees in the day rain fell only from 28 th January 2024.your video were very helpful 🎉 Thanks.I found some 6 th months old tree trees bears fruits (fig ) with green leaves but not ripening.