Please help identify plant w/ small black fruits
otcay
9 years ago
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otcay
9 years agosteiconi
9 years agoRelated Discussions
Strawberry help... one plant w/ fruit turning brown
Comments (3)Jodi: I want to be nice, and sometimes I try, but you have one plant out of 21 with rotting berries, and you need "help"? If you insist on perfection, you are going to have a hard time with fruitgrowing. Your other plants will be sending out plenty of runners to replace the one you lose, and if you suspect a disease you should remove it now. You may regret your decision not to pinch off at least half the blossoms from your plants, not that it has anything to do with your blackened berries. You may also find that applying an organic mulch like aspen shavings between the rows provides the ideal environment to hatch out slugs, pillbugs, and strawberry beetles that will eat your strawberries as they become ripe. You would be better off with just the landscape fabric during the fruiting season, unless you don't have any of these ground-dwelling creatures around. Mulch is fine over the winter season if you want to protect the plants and build up the soil, but it should be worked in or removed when the plants start to fruit. Don Yellman, Great Falls, VA...See MoreI need help identifying this small fruit please
Comments (3)I say it is a wild plum (prunus Americana), there are lots of forms of them as they themselves have been widely cultivated. This is not even to mention those that have escaped cultivation. The color of yours is the approximate color and size of those I've seen in the woods here in Maryland. Another possibility is a wild seedling from a discarded seed. There are lots of possibilities here, but for practical purposes, it's a wild plum. The Navajo made red dye from their roots. At first I thought it was a gooseberry or currant. Looking more closely I recognized it as a wild plum. These will send up suckers under the tree that is said to make a fabulous rootstock for grafting....See MorePlease help to identify a tree - w Photos
Comments (3)Looks like it might have had a freeze burn on the top and they trimmed off branches, i see some branches without leaves sticking out. Many ficus in my neighbourhood had freeze burn...most survived but few 10yo trees died. Also in my neighbourhood i have seen folks shape the tree like trim off half the top and it grows back quickly in few years. They have invasive roots but i have seen some banks/businesses out here which have these planted very close to wall within a foot where its growing like a hedge. I think multitrunk is usually few trees planted together...they dont grow vertically fast grows more sideways. multiple trunks competing makes it grow slow. the single trunk grows upright faster. (i could be way off in my assumption...iam quoting what the college guy working at a nursery told me)....See MoreNewbie w/great seedling needs help w/ identifying?
Comments (9)Oh my gosh- I remember thinking about that when I first logged on to their site- then I got sucked into the website and forgot all about it- I'm really glad I did, although I am really new at this and I'm sure the mistake they made didn't make as big a lingering (obviously) impression on me as it would to a more experienced "fig" person. I actually forgot all about the name and will be notifying them as to the mistake asap. In the meantime, I would be happy to post pix of the "trees" I have received and will let you be the judge... and if I've been duped, I will still have figs as 2 of the gorgeous trees have figs on them! Thank you for reminding me of this and I will try to post the pix within a couple days. Figs ROCK! Christy...See Moretheforgottenone1013 (SE MI zone 5b/6a)
9 years agofloral_uk z.8/9 SW UK
9 years agolilyd74 (5b sw MI)
9 years agootcay
9 years agoseysonn
9 years agogalinas
9 years agoAtharva Rathod
2 years agoAtharva Rathod
2 years agolast modified: 2 years ago
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