Xtremehorticulture

Figs Dropping Off

Q. My fig tree is receiving 12 gallons of water a week in the middle of the summer. I water it for 40 minutes, three times a week right now while it is hot. Some of the leaves are brown on the edges. The fruit did not mature and they dropped off. Figs drying and dropping from the tree A.  12 gallons of water a week is not enough. Trees at the University Orchard in North Las Vegas that are 6 to 7 feet tall and about just as wide should get 30 gallons of water, three times per week or a total of 90 gallons. Fruit trees are moderate water users but the soil cannot become dry when they are producing fruit. If it does, it affects the fruit size and quality and it’s possible it may not develop at all. When figs are not given enough water (either the quantity is not enough or they are not receiving water often enough) the fruit becomes small, hard and often times drops from the tree. I don’t know how much of this water is actually getting to the roots. When watering, enough water should be applied in a single application to water roots to a depth of 18 inches, minimum, 24 inches is better. The water should be applied under the canopy so that at least half of the area under the canopy is wet. Take a piece of 3/8 inch rebar and push it into a wet area under the trees canopy. You should be able to push it easily to this depth. Pushing it into the soil easily means the soil is wet. It pushes with a lot of difficulty if the soil is dry. Applying a 4 inch layer of surface mulch helps keep the soil moist, reduces fruit drop and improves fruit quality. Both rock and wood surface mulch works but wood is better for fruit trees. I am guessing a tree that is 4 feet tall might require 15 to 20 gallons, three times per week right now.

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Fig Fruits Drying Usually Lack of Water to the Tree

Q. This is the first year my seven year old Black Mission Fig is “behaving” strangely. The fruit came on, some even started to ripen, and now they are shriveling on the tree. The tree looks perfect and so do the leaves. I did read your article on figs but ours always seems to be treated the same, year in and out. A. All of the cases that I have seen of fig fruits drying out on the tree have been from a lack of water getting to the fruits. This can be from a lack of applied water, plugging drip emitters, damage to the tree trunk restricting water to the fruits, or an increase in tree size without the application of more water. Exactly what you don’t want to do is to mix and match high water use plants (fig) with low water use plants (cactus). Note the poor canopy development due to a lack of water. Watering for the fig will damage the cactus. Watering for the cactus resulted in this drought in the fig tree.             The first response a fig tree has to inadequate amounts of water is for the fruits to shrivel. This typically leaves the rest of the tree unaffected. The leaves look the same; growth appears to be normal but usually with a smaller or open canopy.             A fig tree receiving enough water will have a dense canopy. Oftentimes the canopy is so full you are unable to see through it. Fig fruits are full of water. The tree must receive adequate amounts of water and at the right time to produce fruit like this.             Not enough water to a fig tree results in a more open canopy. It is common for fig trees receiving enough water to grow 6 or 7 feet in one season.             My suspicion is inadequate water. Trees get bigger each year. You either have to add more emitters, increase the size of the emitters or add more minutes to the run time. I would focus on this rather than to water more frequently.             As a test, try supplementing the water the tree gets by adding water with a hose once a week. Create a basin under the canopy, level, about five feet across and several inches deep. Fill this basin once a week.             Also figs do much better if four inches of wood mulch is applied under the canopy in a circle around the trunk with a diameter of at least six feet.

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