Our Peter's honey seems to be cold hardy enough for our climate. It will be in the ground for winter this year, last winter it was inside yet it already had no more than tip damage at noticeably colder than 28 degrees Fahrenheit this Autumn even though it was not dormant yet. Potted up figs will always be dwarfed, and if they are not a dwarf variety a pot could help kill them. A potted non dwarf fig needs to have it's roots pruned regularly to survive and like any other fruit tree if the pot is too small the pot could stress out the tree and kill it that is why old school Italian fig tree owners have planted their fig trees in a wooden barrel, and eventually the roots would go through the barrel in to the ground and become root bound in to the ground. I think that everyone should have at least two fig tree varieties and at least two pomegranate varieties. There are some varieties of fig tree that have survived NYC winters unprotected until the last two winters which the 2013 - 2014 winter killed most of them. I say that because they grew to be usually sizeable considering the climate there, that size kept them alive way beyond what a lot of people thought they could survive. At average we are about 10 - 15 degrees Fahrenheit warmer in the winter than NYC is. I am not sure about where you live yet here the freezing temps do not stay around anywhere near as long as they do in NYC. That is a very good thing as long as the ground does not freeze, or if there is no morning sun.CyntheB wrote: ↑
~ Don't think 0F is a common winter temperature here. But it does happen and I need to plan for that.
~ Very interesting strategy to give the fig winter protection until it's trunk / branches are fist sized. Will plan on doing that with new trees I plant.
My container grown 'Peter's Honey' in CA never got quite that big. I protected it in winter when temps dropped below 28F, but eventually lost it to killing cold in the high teens. It was happy and produced figs regularly for several years, before it declined.
Really appreciate all the experiments you're doing, Alan, with cold protection. You and GregMartin may inspire me to grow more than one variety since I have the land to do so...
There are people that say no matter what soil you have it's best to have a raised area.
If you have room to plant two, and if you have a good location that big then I suggest that you plant them right next to each other and make an even bigger walled up area, one wall instead of two, that way the roots of two trees could share the same area, giving them some more growing area.