'Aldo (Palermo Red)' (Sugar Honey type of flavor)
This fig cultivar originates from a fig collector in the Bronx named Leon, Leon calls this fig cultivar Aldo, originally Leon's father acquired the fig tree. This cultivar of fig is a heavy producer of large breba figs of very good quality, this cultivar of fig is a not a heavy producer of main crop figs yet quality of main crop figs is still good. The eye splits like a star during wet conditions yet syrup drop inside the eye keeps figs from souring. Flesh of the figs is juicy, is sweet, is amber in color, flavor is excellent.
Here is a photo of an Aldo starter fig tree that I will be giving away.
Aldo (Palermo Red)
- alanmercieca
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Re: Aldo (Palermo Red)
This Aldo tree reacted like it was autumn and so a few of it's leaves started the shedding process, that was caused by cool nights outdoors, after that I up-potted this fig tree.
These photos were taken Friday May 13th 2016
These photos were taken Friday May 13th 2016
- alanmercieca
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Re: Aldo (Palermo Red)
Photos taken 11 weeks and 3 days later on Monday August 1st 2016, here is a new photo update of the Aldo fig tree that I will send you bare root
Re: Aldo (Palermo Red)
Looks gorgeous, Alan. Thanks so much!! My garden helper is getting the fig bed filled with great soil for it.alanmercieca wrote: ↑
Photos taken 11 weeks and 3 days later on Monday August 1st 2016, here is a new photo update of the Aldo fig tree that I will send you bare root
Flowers, Fruit Trees & Homegrown Veggies!
Re: Aldo (Palermo Red)
The baby tree recovered after being planted in a pot and given a lot of loving attention. I planted it in a specially prepared raised bed just after the first week of August. So this is 10 weeks since it's been in the ground. Lots of new leaves and sprouts growing up from beneath the soil, too. Now I have to decide how I am going to get it through its first zone 7b winter here.
Flowers, Fruit Trees & Homegrown Veggies!
- alanmercieca
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Re: Aldo (Palermo Red)
I was thinking about it, when they are small they rot much easier as I already told you. I think you should use your idea of wire with pine needles making a ring of pine needles around each tree not touching them, make each ring higher than each tree. If you make the ring high enough then you can also cover the rings with something for insulation like this stuff https://jobescompany.com/product/easy-g ... g-blanket/CyntheB wrote: ↑
This is the Aldo's fig Alan propagated and shipped to me in mid-June. The bare root tree suffered terrible heat shock when the mail person left the shipping box in the sun in front of our house. June is brutal ~ our hottest, driest month in northern AZ. It lost all its leaves and had some dieback on the young branches.
The baby tree recovered after being planted in a pot and given a lot of loving attention. I planted it in a specially prepared raised bed just after the first week of August. So this is 10 weeks since it's been in the ground. Lots of new leaves and sprouts growing up from beneath the soil, too. Now I have to decide how I am going to get it through its first zone 7b winter here.