I have had so much success with cherry cordials this year; they grow big leaves. It's double this size already, still in the same tiny pot.
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I bet it will be awesome when grown. The Palmata heritage it shows and the health and vitality they have is impressive. I am putting several of my low vitality trees on Palmata Hybrid rootstock this year, to try and take advantage of it.I really like growing Cherry Cordial, too, since it’s to satisfying to grow a variety that is so robust and such a good grower. I bet it makes beautifully healthy grown trees.
Cool, I’d love to learn if it turns out to improve the low vigor grafts!I bet it will be awesome when grown. The Palmata heritage it shows and the health and vitality they have is impressive. I am putting several of my low vitality trees on Palmata Hybrid rootstock this year, to try and take advantage of it.



What about this fig drew you in so much? I can’t find out any information on it.Passulita (Paolo Belloni)
Started from cutting this season. Probably my most expensive cutting so far and it took some convincing to get the local collector to let it go.
It rooted well and has been pushing steady growth. No drama so far… which honestly surprises me a little, because my other expensive cuttings usually seem in a hurry to say goodbye.
I hunted this one hard, so yeah - I’m a bit extra excited about it
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Went after Paolo’s ( & MP, TD & JW) favorites… this one dries on the tree excellently - I vaguely remember that I researched into this after seeing something on the other forum or possibly YouTube on it. Not much info - but then also confirmed directly with Paolo that this one dries beautifully on the tree for him.What about this fig drew you in so much? I can’t find out any information on it.
What about this fig drew you in so much? I can’t find out any information on it.

It’s nice to learn about new figs but, also please stop telling me about new figs@Figsee I also found a reference to it today on Ross's blog too - listed among the candidates for his top figs for next year - so it seems he's trialling it too.. But for me that was not it - it was the thrill of the hunt - i guess
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Good to see Fayoumi on that list. I do love seeing and hearing about other Ficus besides pure carica,@Figsee I also found a reference to it today on Ross's blog too - listed among the candidates for his top figs for next year - so it seems he's trialling it too.. But for me that was not it - it was the thrill of the hunt - i guess
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Well it appears that you are learning quickly.I will reply to this thread when I give it a go. This is my first year rooting cuttings so it’s all a learning experience for me at this point. I like your idea of bending the sides square.
It definitely does. Good job.My thought was to keep the roots from circling. One root went straight up a corner. Lol
I also used a 1 liter bottle. This Niagara Black took off quickly. I guess it might qualify for this thread.
They look super good. I have a Smith started 10 days ago. It should do good too.I am so proud of my two Smiths. I killed many cuttings on the way to these as many of you know. They were up potted to 5 gallon nursery pots three weeks ago and are still alive. So I think we've made it. They aren't the fanciest ones... I've got others with fancy names and pedigrees. But these are the ones I worked so hard for. They are supposed to do really well here in South Texas so early fall one will go in the ground.
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I really hope they grow well this summer so I can get figs next year. It feels like everything just sat there with very little growth. They are in bigger pots but it feels like they have been the same size forever. I really should take pictures so I can tell things have grown. Hopefully now that days are sunny and 70-80 they will take off. I really want one in the ground by end of summer. I'm thinking it will be one of my prized in ground treesThey look super good. I have a Smith started 10 days ago. It should do good too.
5 stars for you![]()
I bought a baby Smith tree last year and unfortunately it didn't fruit. I'm really looking forward to fruit from it this year!I am so proud of my two Smiths. I killed many cuttings on the way to these as many of you know. They were up potted to 5 gallon nursery pots three weeks ago and are still alive. So I think we've made it. They aren't the fanciest ones... I've got others with fancy names and pedigrees. But these are the ones I worked so hard for. They are supposed to do really well here in South Texas so early fall one will go in the ground.
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