Page 2 of 2

Re: Caretaking a willow leaf fig

Posted: April 10th, 2010, 10:41 am
by kvan64
Wow, very nice trees. Did you guys train them from small seedlings? I started with some cuttings for a year and they are doing good now. Just don't know how long it would take to get to those stages that you have.

Re: Caretaking a willow leaf fig

Posted: April 10th, 2010, 11:03 am
by Jerry Meislik
Dave,
Awesome!
Any ideas on how the base was formed?
Jerry

Re: Caretaking a willow leaf fig

Posted: April 10th, 2010, 11:43 am
by Bretts
Dave
I actually got drawn into this forum when I advertised Noah's tree on ebay some time ago and some members questioned its value.
Ah those where the days.
You can revisit them here
viewtopic.php?f=96&t=446
Glad to see the fig got a great new home :)

Re: Caretaking a willow leaf fig

Posted: April 10th, 2010, 12:18 pm
by Matthew
Dave,

Good to see your still bobbing your head around now and then :D

There is still some conjecture whether I kept the best one or sold it to him!!!!!! i believe the base on that nerfolia of yours is something else!!!! i know where you are trying to head with it a banyan style which i believe will suit this tree well. another few seasons, maybe expand one side slighly longer than the other so its no so even, define the structure and a shallow pot which i know has been hard to find. I think both trees have there own magic and im quite pleased to have the opportunity to own it and hopefully add to it along its journey :D

Re: Caretaking a willow leaf fig

Posted: April 10th, 2010, 1:27 pm
by Dave54
Hi guys.
Jerry, I believe that they were grown from cuttings off Lambert's first Nerifolia fig.
He grows them all in plastic containers (20 litre drums cut in half long ways) with plenty of 25mm holes in the bottom.
By allowing numerous LOW shoots to grow as "sacrifice branches" is his method for widening the base. He treats the foliage as the "food factory" for the tree and removes none until he is ready to remove that sacrificial branch. Mate,I know you have a copy of my book and it is the same method as illustrated there with Port Jackson Figs.
Having said this, others have tried his methods but don't get the same results.

Matt, I have restyled this tree at different times by having a tall canopy, then shortening it.
It does not look right to me at this time with the canopy looking "Stuck on".
Due to its heavy trunk and the amount of wood underneath, this is the shallowest pot that I can get it into without it sitting too high and looking silly.
I need to get the foliage canopy lower to cover some of those multi trunks and yes, widening that canopy.
The photo doesn't show, however, the canopy is a lot more layered than it appears....They never are finished are they?
cheers
Dave

Re: Caretaking a willow leaf fig

Posted: April 10th, 2010, 1:37 pm
by Jamie
hi dave :D

what has been explained is a very simple yet so effective way of growing figs, if those low sacrificial branches can be grown on and kept going without the urge to cut them off the bases can develop rather quickly, especially with good feeding as figs can be hungry buggers ;)

love your work

jamie :D

Re: Caretaking a willow leaf fig

Posted: April 10th, 2010, 11:58 pm
by Jerry Meislik
Dave,
Thanks for the information.
Jerry

Re: Caretaking a willow leaf fig

Posted: February 21st, 2014, 10:08 pm
by sreeve
I thought I would post an update.
image.jpg

I had the opportunity to visit Canberra recently and noticed yours there Matt, it looked really nice :clap:

Regards
Steve

Re: Caretaking a willow leaf fig

Posted: February 24th, 2014, 10:42 am
by Matthew
sreeve wrote:I thought I would post an update.
image.jpg

I had the opportunity to visit Canberra recently and noticed yours there Matt, it looked really nice :clap:

Regards
Steve

Thanks Steve :tu:
I havent seen it for some time now. Maybe Leigh Can get a recent photo up sometime so i can get reacquainted. :D

Re: Caretaking a willow leaf fig

Posted: February 25th, 2014, 11:04 am
by anthonyW
A real beauty Steve.
Anthony

Re: Caretaking a willow leaf fig

Posted: February 25th, 2014, 11:37 am
by Steven
Looks really nice and healthy Steve! So, has the 'caretaking' role been made official yet? ;)

Are you going to continue to maintain it as it is or do you have any plans for tweaking?

Regards,
Steven

Re: Caretaking a willow leaf fig

Posted: February 26th, 2014, 9:13 pm
by sreeve
Hi Steven,
Thanks for your comment.

My only plans for tweaking at this stage are to increase ramification and try to give it a more rounded / aged look.
Having said that, would be happy to consider any suggestions.

Not sure if this photo compilation will work, but this the recent journey
Regards
Steve
image.jpg