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Two or three years isn't long. I haven't grown a fig yet but was thinking about it and the advice was to contain the roots if you want fruit otherwise you get a lot of leafy growth. Planting in the ground, for example, you are supposed to put a lot of stones and hardcore in as figs do best in poor soil.
Hopefully some experienced fig growers will happen along with some advice.
Whereabouts in Tottenham are you?
If a thing's worth doing, it's worth doing to excess
Two or three years isn't long. I haven't grown a fig yet but was thinking about it and the advice was to contain the roots if you want fruit otherwise you get a lot of leafy growth. Planting in the ground, for example, you are supposed to put a lot of stones and hardcore in as figs do best in poor soil.
Hopefully some experienced fig growers will happen along with some advice.
Whereabouts in Tottenham are you?
There is no more advice EC. I have a couple of figs. One took 6 years to start fruiting. The other (planted out in the soil) never has. My fruiting one is totally pot bound, and loves it. I'm thinking of potting it up and then re-planting the pot in the border.
If it needs a bigger pot because it is unstable in its current situation, put the entire pot into a bigger pot and top it all off with stones, pebbles or gravel to look nice and to weigh it down. Or bury the existing pot in the garden/lottie.
Is earning them figs methinks
If a thing's worth doing, it's worth doing to excess
Oh, and if you do decide to pot it on, now is fine. I'd suggest John Innes no.3 cos that's heavy and soil based but mix a lot of gravel, grit and hardcore in too.
If a thing's worth doing, it's worth doing to excess
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