Ficus benjamina progression
Posted: March 23rd, 2018, 1:51 pm
Hello everyone,
A year and a half ago, i managed to convince a friend of mine to part with 6 benjamina that were slowly dying in pots in a planter in front of his shop. It tooks 2 hours of sweat and being covered with sap and ants to remove them from the planter. They had been there for a long time.... The roots were all tangled of course, and the trees in bad shape. No water, no food... Apart from the occasional drunken good Samaritan once in a while, judging by the smell of them!
I had to chop them all around 80cm to fit in my boot. Then i let them recover for a couple of months, Seasol only first, then a little liquid fert.
Afterwards they all got root pruned drastically, trunks shortened and planted in large garden sieves, to start straight away on the nebary.
A year later, they are now all very healthy and somewhat ready for their first styling.
A very long way to go as many big scars will need time to heal.
A year and a half ago, i managed to convince a friend of mine to part with 6 benjamina that were slowly dying in pots in a planter in front of his shop. It tooks 2 hours of sweat and being covered with sap and ants to remove them from the planter. They had been there for a long time.... The roots were all tangled of course, and the trees in bad shape. No water, no food... Apart from the occasional drunken good Samaritan once in a while, judging by the smell of them!
I had to chop them all around 80cm to fit in my boot. Then i let them recover for a couple of months, Seasol only first, then a little liquid fert.
Afterwards they all got root pruned drastically, trunks shortened and planted in large garden sieves, to start straight away on the nebary.
A year later, they are now all very healthy and somewhat ready for their first styling.
A very long way to go as many big scars will need time to heal.