Over wintering rooted cuttings

Indeed!
Predation is an important consideration.
I have a fenced in garden area with chicken wire around the bottom installed to keep rabbits out and it is surrounded by mostly hard ground so moles or voles probably won't be a problem.

But the heavy leaf mulch is the perfect home for mice, especially since remnants from the garden will provide food for them.

Have mice been known to munch on fig trees or their bark when heavily mulched?
 
Indeed!
Predation is an important consideration.
I have a fenced in garden area with chicken wire around the bottom installed to keep rabbits out and it is surrounded by mostly hard ground so moles or voles probably won't be a problem.

But the heavy leaf mulch is the perfect home for mice, especially since remnants from the garden will provide food for them.

Have mice been known to munch on fig trees or their bark when heavily mulched?

I think rats, voles and groundhogs tend to be more significant but perhaps others here could speak to mice. Personally I haven’t had problems with the mice. I get them in my garage where I do store trees but have never seen any mouse damage
 
Ross has had problems with them (or that’s what he says is getting them) in his new home garage. They almost or did girdle several trees this last winter.
 
I am testing Wasabi on ripe figs. :p

I hope critters enjoy the Japanese tradition - loads of wasabi on ripe figs ... ok .. just kidding about the tradition and the fig part..

At least it is anti-bacterial.
 
Anecdotally, capsaicin powder or a liquid solution works for some growers if against poison - have to keep area dry though. I am growing ghost peppers this year specifically to use as a repellent. Generic cayenne powder worked good enough this season to keep the rabbits off the flowers.
 
Hello everyone!

I'm posting to your forum for the first time.

I live in Northeast Georgia on the line between hardiness zone 7B and 8A.

This is the first year I rooted more than one or two fig cuttings and I do not have a sheltered area like a garage or shed to protect them during their first winter. Most are only about two feet tall because I was away for a month this Summer I when i should have been maximizing their development.

I'm thinking about leaving them in the pots but cutting the tops off them all the way down to ground level, then covering the pots with a heavy layer of hardwood leaves I rake up this Autumn.

Do you think that treatment may be too harsh for newly rooted cuttings?

Thank you for any alternative ideas!
I lived about 30 miles south of you in GA with Hardy Chicago, Sal’s, Celeste, Hunt, CDD’s, MegaCeleste, Brown Turkey, Marseilles Black VS in ground. The Etnas and Celeste types (my neighbor called his a ‘turkey fig’, one down the block was ‘Celestial’) fig trees were large enough to climb as was MegaCeleste (wouldn’t recommend it, splits and sours). Hunt was never that productive for me, BT produced but most figs were only so so, Sal’s was nearly identical to HC, MBVS was excellent and productive. CDDs got tips frozen off in winter and were never productive—Black Madeira was similar when planted in ground.
For winter protection of potted more tender figs usually just December and January when temps dropped below 20°F (for the large figs, into the garage, small figs into the crawl space). If I was lazy or had too many, I would put the pots next to the house and cover with leaves.
I grew in ground in tree form, you might be better off with bush. They need shelter from drying winter winds—some say they need to be planted close enough to the house so they can hear people talking. A short board fence or stone wall will work. Etnas and Celeste were the workhorses for me.
I wouldn’t trim yours. There are lots of ways to get the minimal protection you need.
 
Indeed!
Predation is an important consideration.
I have a fenced in garden area with chicken wire around the bottom installed to keep rabbits out and it is surrounded by mostly hard ground so moles or voles probably won't be a problem.

But the heavy leaf mulch is the perfect home for mice, especially since remnants from the garden will provide food for them.

Have mice been known to munch on fig trees or their bark when heavily mulched?
When I was using a popup greenhouse I had problems with mice and rats. My trees where not dormant so the rodents would rob the leaves to make their nest. They would also chew on the trees. I think if I had more spacing between the trees. It would not be so bad. I kept the pots touching each other. Which made perfect small nesting area’s for them.
 
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