GoodFriendMike
Moderator
I would remove them. You want them to put there energy elsewhere.
I would remove them. You want them to put there energy elsewhere.
Nice tip on compacting the soil. I also heard Brian from ProfigUSA mention compacting the soil for fig pops. It sounds like something I will have to try
That's great info! Thank you! I was so worried about losing them with up-potting so I figured I would start them in 4 x 9's. But then realized I didn't know how to tell if there were roots and knew leaves didn't necessarily equal roots. Thanks you the tip about the leaf growth. Some are bigger than that and growing like crazy - like look at them in the morning and by evening it's surprising that it's the same plant- and some leaves are 2.5 inches across now so I guess from what you're saying I'm overdue for feeding some of them And I'll try exactly what you have there. I had no idea what I was going to feed with so I'll look on Amazon for kelp. I really appreciate the help!
Would you please share a pic?I made my own out of PVC and like it for filling fig pop bags. Same amount of soil mix in each bag.
I just don’t fig pop my cuttings any more.
Ok thanks I thought so. I will try one with tweezers and try not to hurt the leaves. If it messes up the leaves I'll wait a little bit till the other leaves get bigger and the remove the other. I think I can get them with tweezers thoughI would remove them. You want them to put there energy elsewhere.
Here are two pictures. One shows the length of the 2” PVC pipe (12 inches). The other shows a slight tapered tip I cut which help you slide the fig pop bag over the tube.Plus
Would you please share a pic?
I got them off without hurting the leavesPick the figs off.
Awesome - thanks!!Here are two pictures. One shows the length of the 2” PVC pipe (12 inches). The other shows a slight tapered tip I cut which help you slide the fig pop bag over the tube.
I fill the tube to the very top with rooting media. That fills a bag nicely.

Not guaranteed, but that can be a good sign.I'm sharing because I'm excited! I have failed root 4 previous smith cuttings from 3 sources and I'm on cutting 5 and 6....but today I peeked in my dark cutting box and there's a tiny bud of green! I know it may not mean success yet and anything could happen but it's the first time I actually have a bud!
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Did you find out the cause(s) of the last 4 failures? That to me is a valuable lesson to help rooting the next cutting. Also, if you are new to rooting, it is best to root cutting one at a time, especially when you have duplicates.I'm sharing because I'm excited! I have failed root 4 previous smith cuttings from 3 sources and I'm on cutting 5 and 6....but today I peeked in my dark cutting box and there's a tiny bud of green! I know it may not mean success yet and anything could happen but it's the first time I actually have a bud!
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Yep I'm new making rookie mistakes and learning a ton.. first two I think were too wet. I took them out and looked and they looked rotted- and I didn't put them in the darkDid you find out the cause(s) of the last 4 failures? That to me is a valuable lesson to help rooting the next cutting. Also, if you are new to rooting, it is best to root cutting one at a time, especially when you have duplicates.
Sand holds what it will hold. I added about 1/3 perlite to break up the density a bit. I rinse the sand thoroughly, drain, smack the container on the countertop, drain the excess water that surfaces, smack and drain a few times until no more water surfaces. Then I mix in the perlite to break up the solid mat of sand that results. Cut a groove with my finger, lay the cutting horizontally in the groove. Spray water lightly to nudge the sand up to the cutting. I did inadvertently lay a couple right on the sand, no inserting, but these ones have pushed themselves up off the sand by the roots.how wet do you start yours, i see "moist" but what do you think a moisture meter would read them at im terrible at telling by feel
I second that; since there's always going to be some temperature overshoot (when using a thermostat), I get the best results setting my thermostat at 76.Temps do matter. I find 70 to 80F ideal.
I would not be trusted to say anything is hard to root in terms of variety - and I'm not sure that's really a thing... From what I've seen in other people's posts it's doesn't matter as long as conditions are right it may be that some varieties tolerate good enough and some are more narrow range but I didn't have any issues rooting any others so " hard to root" probably means my conditions aren't right and those fails were all me for sure. My i258, campaniere nsdc and LDA and black triana and NDB and others rooted no problem. The thermalito Olympian, Brunswick and rubado died but they were rotted too and it was me not understanding water. And they were my first ones. The ones that have survived were not drowned. I've only gotten extra cutting of smith because it's supposed to be a good productive southern fig plus it's personal at this point lol and I will get one rooted. I'll eventually try Olympian again but not this year because it will be a jungle in here. The year olds can go to the garage once dormant but my cuttings will take up room inside.Your original message said: "I have failed root 4 previous smith cuttings from 3 sources and I'm on cutting 5 and 6..."
It seems you were suggesting smith was difficult to root because you had 4 attempts from 3 cuttings sources. That was why I asked if you have learnt something from the 4 failed rootings. I am glad you clarified the failure was due to watering, not smith.
Also, you didn't mention you are rooting non-dormant cuttings, which are better to root right away.
Are the cuttings lignified?
What kind of soil are you using? And what water to soil ratio do you settle on this time? Are you using any rooting hormone?