Fig Young Plants

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foliage
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Grows annually

Fig Young Plants

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For those who come too early...new data on berry demand AFTER spring

For those who come too early...new data on berry demand AFTER spring

Traditionally, soft fruit plants are delivered to sales outlets and sold off in early spring. Depending on the season, there may or may not be additional deliveries. Using Google data, we show that the demand for certain types of fruit (or the corresponding terms) is sometimes continuous throughout the year or that there is a second peak after spring when the fruit in question is ripe. But can this effect also be demonstrated in specific plant sales? Are we perhaps systematically selling many...

Figs for brave gardeners – the solution to (almost) all fig problems

Figs for brave gardeners – the solution to (almost) all fig problems

Actually, the fig should be a perfect candidate for a climate-resilient plant for our northern gardens: it knows how to deal with heat and deficiency situations, it can manage with very little water, and it reacts immediately to narrow root space and lack of mineralisation with compact growth. If it dies above ground (because it got too cold in the winter, for example), it usually regenerates from the rootstock without any problems. But as always, when a plant has travelled a very long way in...

Dwarf figs – do dwarf figs or compact fig trees exist at all?

Dwarf figs – do dwarf figs or compact fig trees exist at all?

Again and again dwarf figs or (very) compact growing figs appear on the market, some of which are said to remain below one metre in height. It is striking that for promotion and as an illustration, drawings with an infinite number of fruits on as many short shoots as possible are often shown and that in photographic material and in videos, figs are actually always shown in pots or containers. In this article we will look into the question of whether and how compact growing fig trees or fig...

The standard berry and its alternatives

The standard berry and its alternatives

The 2 to 3 litre pot, tall and usually square, has become the standard in berry plant production. If you wander through the garden centres in the spring and analyse the offers with a gardener's eye, all you see is always the same: almost the same pot, with a slightly different but always large label, nota bene with as little information as possible. It is a well-known fact that customers cannot read. At least that's what our advertising consultants seem to think. Garden centres are no better. I...

Lubera Edibles Podcast #17: Lubera Edibles Novelties 2022/2023 - Part II

Lubera Edibles Podcast #17: Lubera Edibles Novelties 2022/2023 - Part II

To include all the novelties in one podcast would have blown up the usual time frame. That's why we decided to do an additional novelty episode. In the first part, we went into our vegetable novelties and the citrus novelties again. In this episode, the second part of the novelties, Markus Kobelt, Co-Founder of Lubera Edibles, presents our blackberry novelties and explains why we also use varieties from other breeding programmes. Frederik Vollert, Product Developer at Lubera Edibles, presents...