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Ficus Pumila - Covering the Exterior Walls in Green 🏡 #176
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Today on our evening walk we visited the Conservatório Bomfim (music school) and Inês talked to the caretaker. He kindly gave us these clippings: Following the instructions I found online for clipping propagation: https://www.gardenguides.com/101322-propagate-ficus-plant.html going to do the work now so they don’t dry out. 🌱 |
Good news! It’s been 5 weeks since we put the clippings in water and most of them have sprouted roots! 🌱 so I went to Leroy Merlin this morning and bought some small (15cm diameter) pots to transplant them into soil: Going to do the potting of the seedlings this afternoon with A. Will continue to house them in our mini-greenhouse to keep them warm. But I will be using rain water (that I collected this week when it was pouring) to irrigate them as I think our tap water isn’t great for plants. 🤔 |
@iteles I've been spraying the leaves with tap water each morning to keep them hydrated. |
I think that it would be great to add some nutrients - give them the best start possible in life! |
@iteles thinking of using worm tea from the composter diluted 1:10 with water. (not on the leaves, just add to the soil) |
Worm tea sounds... 😂 🐛 Lovely! |
@iteles misting the leaves to keep them hydrated until the roots are established to draw enough moisture from the soil: |
One of the things to have in mind when embarking on this kind of adventure A quick search for a telescopic pruner returned the "Fiskars UP86":
Fiskars UP86 Tree Pruner Revisited (long-term review):
Usefully it appears to be easy to maintain the mechanism; the internal rope that operates the pruner is changeable When? ⏳We don't need to buy this for the next couple of years while the vines are establishing themselves. I'm just capturing this mini research so it's clear we have thought about how to maintain the vines. 💭 More detail: https://hgic.clemson.edu/factsheet/climbing-fig/ |
The clippings have grown remarkably well in the last few months and are ready to be planted out! 🌱 🎉 |
@iteles yesterday you mentioned that that you had read that Sadly, I get the feeling this is Facebook-fuelled misinformation. 🤷♂️ http://www.eattheweeds.com/climbing-fig-creeping-fig/ (shared in the OP above ... sharing again) The FDA list of Poisonous that some non-experts refer to: Does not include The California Poison Control System: https://calpoison.org/topics/plant#nontoxic-common
North Carolina State University has this page with detailed info: https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/ficus-pumila/ If you search the page for "toxic" (or variants of the word) you will find zero hits: Similarly Clemson.edu College of Agriculture, Forestry and Life Sciences has a very informative Factsheet: The University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences has the following Fact Sheet: Again, no mention of toxicity/poisonous. It references: https://www.cabi.org/isc "In China, Taiwan, and Japan, it is commercially cultivated to make jellies from the fruit" In the Risk of Introductions section: https://www.cabi.org/isc/datasheet/24162#tosummaryOfInvasiveness Couldn't find a PDF of the book available online, but Google Books allows searching in the book: The book basically a compendium of 10k+ plants with tiny amount of info for each one. Which "mammals"...?! 🤷♂️ |
🙄 🙄 🙄 🙄 🙄 It's like you've never met me. Or like you think I've never met you. 🙄 This is where I first saw it when I was looking at possibly buying some plants: Then also see below: https://hortology.co.uk/collections/trailing-hanging-plants/products/ficus-pumila-white-sunny-creeping-fig https://www.trees.com/house-plants/creeping-fig https://www.houseplantsexpert.com/growing-a-creeping-fig-indoors.html I think we can safely conclude it's not fatal but can be an irritant. |
Im attaching some pictures of my backyard. Ficus pumila is the best choice for covering the wall. Some info about cares, benefits, myths and truths (spanish): ficus-pumila.pdf (letterpaper) |
@tuxkernel this is incredible!! 😍 |
@nelsonic two years to grow. But with cares you can reduce the time. If you need additional info, don't forget ask me. Happy growing! ;-) |
July 2023 Update!Our most well-established A month ago when we visited Our son is keen on plants & gardening. So when I told him we were going to transplanting he was excited! We took a bowl and went to the construction gravel bag (Brita 1) to grab some gravel: Put a little bit of gravel into each of the 8 plant pots: Then got some soil ("Terra Preta") from the pile and put crumbled in into the pots: Next we got some potting/germination compost and put a little in each pot: Selected the 8 clippings with the most well-established roots: Once we had transplanted 8 together we packed in the root section into the nutrient rich compost: Once the compost + roots was gently compacted, watered them: The pots are placed in the trays on top of the wall where they can get good sunlight but not all day only around 2-3h/day: The tray holding the pots allows us to water them generously: And the water in the tray is pulled up by the plants by capillary action. Added a teaspoon of rooting agent to each plant, but far from the stem: When I gave them a final water the rooting agent filtered into the soil and will encourage the plants to establish. Transferred the remaining cuttings into glass bottles with fresh water and rooting agent: @iteles we need to axsk As for the remaining clippings, none of them have sufficient roots for transplanting, yet... 🌱 ⌛ |
Hooray! This looks like a fun morning too ❤️ |
The advantage of the trays is that |
According to: https://greg.app/creeping-fig-fertilizer/ (dunno if that link will last...) We need a balanced NPK fertiliser to stimulate growth. Going to collect some 10:10:10 from Leroy on my next visit. 👨🌾🤞🏼 Also need to buy 3 Passion Fruit vines to plant. 🌱 |
This is the 3rd well-established ficus vine that had a protective plastic fence around it for the past couple of years: I removed the green plastic protection around it and added a white mesh to the stair banister vertical bars. The mesh serves as child protection as the gap between the vertical bars is too wide for child safety - the house was built long before those regulations existed!! - but it will double as a trellis for the ficus vine: The vine is now trained to grow on the trellis and I have watered it generously with the organic NPK mix. 🌱👌 |
Sadly, having clean jars in the kitchen - that I had carefully collected for the seedlings - was seen as an invitation to use them, and also sadly, two were broken! 😞 So I only had 10 jars for the seedlings: I added a table spoon of root growth powder and the same in NPK (plant food) to test if the seedlings grow roots faster on this experiment: Took all the clippings from our own plants around the house for the first time: Prepared them by removing the bottom leaves off the clippings and stuck them in the jars with water: hope these take root. 🌱🤞🏼 Meanwhile the other 10 that are in pots are more than ready to plant out! 😍 Very impressed with the growth of the plant under the stairs: It gets barely any sunlight and is very healthy and vigorous! |
Ever since we embarked on the @home project it's been our ambition to cover the house in plants. #8
This is Ivy:
It looks great but requires a lot of maintenance to keep it looking this good.
The major downside of Ivy is that gives a very "thick" cover which can encourage pests like rats and snakes. 🐍
The vine we are planning plant is quite tight against the wall so there's less chance of pests.
Luckily, we've never seen a rat/mouse @home outdoor.
https://carminereddarter.wordpress.com/2015/08/11/my-favourite-buildings-in-london-the-house-overgrown-by-ivy-in-de-beauvoir-hackney
After much research (online and IRL) we stumbled upon
Ficus pumila
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ficus_pumilaWhile walking at Conservatório Bomfim http://conservatorio.bomfim.org/fotografias/#!
The panorama of the wall really does not do it justice. It's 80+ meters of green wall and looks amazing!
The wall is north-west facing and it has only partial sunlight for around 2 hours per day.
This close-up photo allowed us to use Google Lens to lookup:
The density of the foliage is excellent and it's
evergreen
, new leaves grow while the old ones are still on the vine.Which means there are multiple colors of leaves at several times of the year.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ficus_pumila#/media/File:Ficus_pumila.jpg
The most mature leaves are the darkest green:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ficus_pumila#/media/File:Feuilles_de_Ficus_pumila.jpg
The fruits are edible: http://www.eattheweeds.com/climbing-fig-creeping-fig they are used in Taiwanese cuisine.
Not that we are growing the plants for their fruit; just we wouldn't grow them if the fruits were toxic to humans or animals.
This house has it's own wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Wilson_Beach_House
#LifeGoals
😉Additional Reading
There is conflicting info on how tall the plants grow. Some places say 4m, but there is plenty of evidence of taller.
We need ours to grow 7m while maintaining decent coverage.
Considerations
Todo
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