Illinois Everbearing Mulberry(Morus alba x rubra) Fruiting in AZ - 9B

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  • čas přidán 12. 09. 2024
  • This was a tree I bought as a Pakistan from Stark Bros (www.starkbros....) but it turns out to be what I believe to be Illinois Everbearing (Morus alba x rubra). This is its 4th year in ground in the Phoenix AZ area. Be careful buying mulberry varieties--apparently nurseries can easily get them confused.

Komentáře • 17

  • @51rwyatt
    @51rwyatt Před 4 měsíci

    I just planted the same mulberry and am looking forward to how nice and big yours got

  • @great0789
    @great0789 Před 4 lety +1

    Nice Vid! I just planted two "dwarf everbearing", a Illinois Everbearing, and a Shangri La in my yard recently. I feel like this was looking into the future! I need to start making air layers of these trees in case one dies. I can plant them by the pond at the front of the neighborhood. It will feed the kids... the birds.... and the omnivorous fish in the pond.

    • @great0789
      @great0789 Před 4 lety

      How many times do you get mulberries from the dwarf everbearing mulberries every year?

  • @sheri023
    @sheri023 Před 4 lety

    In my area (9A) we all have fruitless mulberry trees for shade. Can't wait for my Pak. one to fruit--maybe next yr. Thanks for showing the different varieties; birds love them I'll bet.

  • @Faithfulsheperd
    @Faithfulsheperd Před 4 lety

    We miss your videos!!
    Garden looks prolific !!

  • @Mrromperz
    @Mrromperz Před 4 lety

    Wow your trees look super healthy👍

  • @Ckawauchi35
    @Ckawauchi35 Před 4 lety +1

    I wish I saw this video before I bought and planted my Everbearing Mulberry tree 3 yrs ago and I would have planted the Shangri-la!

  • @shoukatalihunzai1
    @shoukatalihunzai1 Před 4 lety

    In the Hunza valley and Gilgit valley Pakistan we have white and black mulburry, we prefer to eat the white one because its really sweet, black ones are a little sour, I don't know why people here don't like black, although both are the same size, like an inch long, 10 mulberry can be mouthful, thanks for the nice video!

  • @blaynesplantvlog7117
    @blaynesplantvlog7117 Před 4 lety +1

    My mulberry is looking like that but it’s 105 degrees.... and it’s September 1 so is it to early for it to be going to sleep? And is this a problem... it seems the OLDER LEAVS brown on the edges and then turn yellow and fall of... but it’s 100 degrees!????

    • @EnlightenmentGarden
      @EnlightenmentGarden  Před 4 lety

      Hopefully it's not bacterial leaf scorch and just a case of heat stress with the extreme heat this year. Try feeding and really flooding it well to promote vigor. It should respond quickly by pushing new growth. I accidentally left my hose on one night and dropped about 5,000 gallons. My mulberry had new flushes all over it 2 days later. Good accident in the end as the trees needed it in the absence of rain. In my experience, mulberries start dropping leaves when the highs go below 70 in November.

  • @nassrmalik
    @nassrmalik Před 4 lety

    I have question regarding Mulberry, I have a cutting from the tree and I put it in plastic bag with little water and now I see some leaves forming ! What is the next step to move the cuttings out of the plastic bag?

  • @blaynesplantvlog7117
    @blaynesplantvlog7117 Před 4 lety

    Will Bacterial leaf scorch kill it possibly? Hope not

  • @blaynesplantvlog7117
    @blaynesplantvlog7117 Před 4 lety

    I have another question..... if it is Bacterial leaf scorch.... will it possibly kill it? Or is it fine?

  • @blaynesplantvlog7117
    @blaynesplantvlog7117 Před 4 lety

    If it is bacterial leave Scorch how do I treat for that

    • @EnlightenmentGarden
      @EnlightenmentGarden  Před 4 lety

      Sadly there is no treatment. You may want to contact an arborist to confirm the issue.