I think since it is the summer, it is ok to talk about things other than ducks. One of my prize possessions is my fig tree. I dug this as a root ball a few years back. It was in a vacant lot behind me, and the woman that owned it had let a guy garden there for 20 years. but she had 1 rule, which was pretty generous. And that rule was, no killing the animals-squirrels, woodchucks, chipmunks, whatever. And she put up with his boards and old windows and all of the crap that a gardener can accumulate to do one task or the other. This guy was quite a gardener, and probably grew enough stuff to feed three families. But he wouldn't pay attention to the owner, and set some box traps that year-and then didn't tend them. Somebody found a squirrel or woodchuck that had starved to death, and he lost his privileges. A shame, but it was totally his fault and he was not respectful of the property owner(whom was paying $8K per year in taxes on that lot-same that I pay). So he had this fig tree that he didn't like and just cut it to the ground every year, and told me I was welcome to it. So I decided to dig it up and transplant is to my yard. Well, that was one hell of an endeavor. It took me two evenings to dig around and under it and lever it out of the ground with some boards without destroying the root system. When I finally got it out, I turned it on its side, flipped the wheelbarrow on its side, pushed it in and flipped it back up. The thing must have weighed close to 200 pounds. I was pretty proud of myself.
Figs are one of the sweetest things that you can grow. The problem is, they are at their very best when the skin is splitting and juice is starting to ooze out, and they can't be marketed like that because they only have a day or so before they start to rot at that point. So while you can buy them sometimes, they have to be picked early and they just are not as good. Lots of the old Italians in NJ had fig trees, often from a cutting they took before they left Italy. Not being Italian, I never really got it until I was older and became friends with a guy that has 8-10 of them and several different varieties. What I have are black figs, the skin actually gets purple when they ripen, which is in August and into September.
In this climate you have to take a little winter care of them, which means wrapping them up in something to keep the buds from freezing. It won't kill the tree if they freeze, but will kill that growth, which means you have to prune it back and it may not produce that year or will produce less. I use carpet padding to wrap them in, then put a plastic garbage bag over the top to keep water out. The branches stay flexible so you can just get a rope or twine going around the branches horizontally and pull it tight so it squeezes together compresses the tree and forms a straight up and down bunch that I then wrap. After the bag I usually wrap some burlap around it so it doesn't look like Appalachia in my front yard.
I enjoy watching my figs grow throughout the summer, as I am sure others do with various things that they grow. Here is my tree(or bush).
View attachment whole tree.jpg
And here are some little figs growing, like all fruit, they start out really tiny, but you can always tell that they are little figs and not a leaf.
View attachment little figs.jpg
Figs are one of the sweetest things that you can grow. The problem is, they are at their very best when the skin is splitting and juice is starting to ooze out, and they can't be marketed like that because they only have a day or so before they start to rot at that point. So while you can buy them sometimes, they have to be picked early and they just are not as good. Lots of the old Italians in NJ had fig trees, often from a cutting they took before they left Italy. Not being Italian, I never really got it until I was older and became friends with a guy that has 8-10 of them and several different varieties. What I have are black figs, the skin actually gets purple when they ripen, which is in August and into September.
In this climate you have to take a little winter care of them, which means wrapping them up in something to keep the buds from freezing. It won't kill the tree if they freeze, but will kill that growth, which means you have to prune it back and it may not produce that year or will produce less. I use carpet padding to wrap them in, then put a plastic garbage bag over the top to keep water out. The branches stay flexible so you can just get a rope or twine going around the branches horizontally and pull it tight so it squeezes together compresses the tree and forms a straight up and down bunch that I then wrap. After the bag I usually wrap some burlap around it so it doesn't look like Appalachia in my front yard.
I enjoy watching my figs grow throughout the summer, as I am sure others do with various things that they grow. Here is my tree(or bush).
View attachment whole tree.jpg
And here are some little figs growing, like all fruit, they start out really tiny, but you can always tell that they are little figs and not a leaf.
View attachment little figs.jpg