My mother's house (Bodmin moor) has an ancient fig tree planted right up against it, allegedly to help remove the damp. It has figs most years, but they don't often ripen.
Where I live they are an invasive weed, but all the animals love the fruit. It's common to see a turkey with a fig being chased across the field by half a dozen other turkeys, chickens and occasionally a sheep. The pigs are particularly keen, but it can be a moving experience for them if they eat too many.
Fun fact: did you know that inside every fig is a dead wasp? It might make you change your mind about eating them.https://askabiologist.asu.edu/explore/life-and-death-fig-wasp
Where I live they are an invasive weed ...
I absolutely love figs. The wasp don't put me off.
When we finally buy a house, right up there on my list of essential things, juuuust after workshop is a fig tree. maybe some Greengage and victoria plums too. Maybe a walnut tree.
In five years time I'll be rolling in soft fruit.
Figuratively because that would just be a waste.
................As for walnuts, like our hazel nuts, green one week, stolen by squirrels? the next week.
These are probably oil olives, or it is a wild, inedible variety. Just for fun, as late in the year as you can wait (frost is not good), crush the olives using a blender or food processor and put them in a bucket of water. The oil will rise to the surface. It may take 24 hours or more to get a good yield, and then you have the puzzle of getting the oil out of the bucket without the water.At least they won't take all the olives - I have a 20+ year old olive tree in a sheltered spot on the same allotment that produces hundreds of olives, but they never reach over 5mm in size.
If there's damp it could be north facing which means the fig isn't getting enough sun? In England figs do produce a lot of figlets that either drop off or survive over winter to ripen the following summer. Interesting about the turkeys robbing fruit as the most popular variety in the UK is Brown Turkey.My mother's house (Bodmin moor) has an ancient fig tree planted right up against it, allegedly to help remove the damp. It has figs most years, but they don't often ripen.
Where I live they are an invasive weed, but all the animals love the fruit. It's common to see a turkey with a fig being chased across the field by half a dozen other turkeys, chickens and occasionally a sheep. The pigs are particularly keen, but it can be a moving experience for them if they eat too many.
Fun fact: did you know that inside every fig is a dead wasp? It might make you change your mind about eating them.https://askabiologist.asu.edu/explore/life-and-death-fig-wasp
All you'll be doing with a walnut tree is feeding the grey squirrel!!
And wasps with the soft fruit!
Phil
I've got these too....It's the devil's own job to get rid if the Multitude of Bulbs that they produce. The only cure I can think of is to Remove; Dispose of to the Council-Tip & Replace ALL of the Soil in that area with Clean-Good-Quality-Compost ! - I have been tryng for 7 years up to now, without much success !Common invasive weeds here are St. John's Wort and crocosmia. My back hedge -View attachment 117389
Absolutely yes north facing. The roots lift up the flagstones the kitchen from time to time, and once we had a spring appear, which is like rising damp, only wetter. Still, it mostly seems to work. No idea how old the tree is, but it was mature 50 years ago.If there's damp it could be north facing which means the fig isn't getting enough sun? In England figs do produce a lot of figlets that either drop off or survive over winter to ripen the following summer. Interesting about the turkeys robbing fruit as the most popular variety in the UK is Brown Turkey.
My pigs used to get drunk on overripe apples!
Great tip - we have ground elder so I'll give it a go. When I was a lad I worked on a farm and the hedge along the silage pit was killed by the dark brown runoff.We have Crocosmia here in Wales.... it's not particularly invasive, but tends to grow in some spots and not others, usually on the roadsides.
Not sure if this one works, but many years ago, In Christchurch one day, I noticed a bowling green keeper piling his grass cuttings all along the edges. Talking to him, he said that if it were layered up over the summer, resulting in a layer 4 to 6 inches deep, the decomposition juices penetrated the ground below and was toxic to weeds (and just about anything else, I suppose). He said you then leave it over the winter, roll it up each spring, then do it all again.
Anyway, having some ground elder under a hedge coming through from waste ground next door at the time, I tried it ..... and it worked. A bit unsightly, but it did the job for me. Didn't bother the Beech hedge too much.
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