A standard ficus or fig tree ( Ficus species) is one that has been grown in a pot and trained to create a classic "ball on a stick" look. Most fig trees make excellent standard plant subjects because they are hardy, suffer being pot bound and tolerate long periods without water.about being bound in a container and can tolerate low water levels. The only one to avoid turning into a standard ficus, however, is the edible fruiting fig tree ( Ficus carica ).

Steps

  1. A common problem is branching out, causing a fan or vase shape to form instead of the characteristic ball shape sought from a standard.
  2. While this does count as severe pruning, the fig tree can cope with this and it will regenerate new, vigorous growth quickly.
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  3. Roots should also be cut back periodically, especially with the larger fig trees.
  4. The aim is to reshape it into a ball and then to maintain this shape. If maintained, you will avoid having to put the fig through such a severe pruning again.
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Community Q&A

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  • Question
    Can a standard fig be planted in the garden when it becomes to big for its pot, or is the root system too strong?
    Ninox
    Top Answerer
    As long as the pot is big enough, you can keep it into it. Roots grow more slowly as the tree grows.
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      Tips

      • If you need to remove any branches, do so during the "severe" pruning stage and train the ball as well as you can to cover any scars.
      • The Ficus species can tolerate shady environments well, making standard fig trees suitable for door entrances, etc., that are shaded. Ficus benjamina is a good choice for heavy shading, including for indoor areas.
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      Warnings

      • Avoid getting the milky sap from ficus on your skin. You may find it causes serious irritation.
      • Avoid over watering standard figs; too much water can turn the leaves yellow. Use the finger test - if the soil is moist when you push in a finger to about 2.5 centimeter (1.0 in) depth, it doesn't need watering; if dry, it does.
      • Avoid pruning a standard fig tree on hot days; the leaves that are exposed by pruning might be easily burned. [1]
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      Things You'll Need

      • Clean gardening snips or shears
      • Gardening gloves (optional)


      References

      1. Garden Banter, Pruning a Standard Ficus

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