I always wait till the 24th of May it’s kind of on a safe zone with the weather. I already got figlets happening on every trees. Having figlets now is a good indication I’ll be eating figs in August.Love it! Mine have been out for a couple weeks on a north wall to harden them off. I just put them out to their regular spots before the weekend.
Had them in my temporary greenhouse with heat and fansOut? They look like they have been in perfect weather for at least a month. Great looking trees.
I feel like when it gets too hot in the greenhouse the trees don’t understand why temperature drops drastically so that’s why I take em all out. The day time is starting to get really hot in the tent I don’t want them to get used to that. Plus where I place all my trees it’s facing the south sun all day.Looking good! I have too many darn trees. Have to take them out and acclimate in batches. Some are still indoors, the newly rooted ones, albeit. Some are still in the makeshift greenhouse... I am in no rush to take them out... it was 20C outside but 32 in the GH... they are loving it there...
Makes sense.I feel like when it gets too hot in the greenhouse the trees don’t understand why temperature drops drastically so that’s why I take em all out. The day time is starting to get really hot in the tent I don’t want them to get used to that. Plus where I place all my trees it’s facing the south sun all day.
growing degree days, its a measurement that some plants track for ripening fruit. its days above like 75 degreesWhat is GDD?
Growing Degree Days (GDD) are a standard measurement used by farmers and gardeners to track accumulated heat. GDD is used to fairly reliably predict when crops will mature or when specific pests will emerge. GDD is typically calculated with a base temp of 50F, as 50F is when most plants, especially the warm weather plants like figs, start to grow. The higher the temp above 50F, the higher their metabolic activity is, the faster plants grow. This, of course, is valid up to a point, above which the law of dinishing returns kicks in and at some point you start getting negative effect, e.g. heat stress. Figs thrive at temps near 32C/90F.What is GDD?
I will@Vitooch1 If possible, can you provide some closeup pics of your main crop figlets? I would love to compare to what I am seeing on mine.
@TorontoJoe can you post some closeup pics of some of yours as well?
Thanks!
Growing Degree Days (GDD) are a standard measurement used by farmers and gardeners to track accumulated heat. GDD is used to fairly reliably predict when crops will mature or when specific pests will emerge. GDD is typically calculated with a base temp of 50F, as 50F is when most plants, especially the warm weather plants like figs, start to grow. The higher the temp above 50F, the higher their metabolic activity is, the faster plants grow. This, of course, is valid up to a point, above which the law of dinishing returns kicks in and at some point you start getting negative effect, e.g. heat stress. Figs thrive at temps near 32C/90F.
Nice progress, Vito. Great video and outstanding soundtrack! Thanks for sharing.
It’s nice to see locals in the area managing the same process. It’s something we can compare and learn from eachother. There was more to the video but I cant go over 60 seconds on you tube shorts. I’ll keep it posting.Nice progress, Vito. Great video and outstanding soundtrack! Thanks for sharing.
I see similar progress on mine. Some trees have pea-sized figlets and others just small bumps.
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