
Note: I have images of some varieties. Just click on the links to see them and hit the back button of your browser to return to this page. Most of these images were published in the September 1997 issue of Martha Stewart Living (a wonderful magazine for crafts and garden ideas) and are copyrighted by the publisher. Some of the identifications they use are erroneous, but I have left the magazine's labels on the images wherever possible and merely added the correct name. Correct varietal names are in bold type.
I am eagerly seeking more photos of figs and fig leaves to scan for this website. If you have any, please e-mail me at raygivan@earthlink.net.
Small to medium, light-brown to violet fruit with strawberrypulp. Turbinate to oblique, mostly without neck.
Small eye which has a reddish color from a very early stage (unlike Celeste).
Leaf: typically small; base subcordate; 3 lobes; margins crenate. Cold hardy.
It fruits on new growth if winter killed. Often bears two crops a year. Condit
writes that it is very sweet, but not rich. My own experience is that is not
as rich as Celeste, but is considerably better than passable. Good fresh or
as preserves. Synonyms: Eastern Brown Turkey, English Brown Turkey, Everbearing,
La Perpetuelle, Lee's Perpetual, Texas Everbearing.
A medium
purplish-brown fig with amber tinged with pink pulp. Best for fresh use. Light
crop of brebas which are oblique-pyriform, sometimes elongated; main crop
figs are obovate to oblique-pyriform with variable neck. Leaf: base calcarate;
lobes lyrate; margins crenate. Well-adapted in southern California, but usually
a disappointment in the South since it loses hardiness quite easily in the
spring. Experienced California growers recommend heavy pruning for the best
crops. Synonyms: Black Spanish, Brown Turkey, San Pedro, San Piero,
Thompson's Improved Brown Turkey.
Fred Born acquired this variety
from an Italian grower in Chicago a number of years ago and has shared it
with other enthusiasts. It has also become a commercial variety for it is
an excellent fig. (Note: Hardy Chicago does resemble Brown Turkey,
but the leaves and fruit are distinguishable. It is very hardy. The fruit
is small to medium with blackish=purple skin and strawberry pulp. Small eye.
Pyriform with long slender neck. Leaf: base calcarate; 5 lobes, lyrate. Very
good fresh, dried or in preserves. Responds well to oiling (a method of inducing
ripening of immature fruit in late Fall). Well-adapted in the Eastern U.S.
and deserves trials in the Northwest. Last summer I confirmed to my own satisfaction
that the commercial variety offered by Edible Landscaping is identical with
Fred's variety. Synonym: Chicago Hardy.
A small, oblique-spherical
violet fig with strawberry pulp. Good quality and dries readily. Condit has
only a meagre description of this variety and I just acquired a plant likely
to be this variety in Nov 1998. I expect to trial this variety with northern
growers since it should be very suitable for areas with cool summers. It is/was
grown in Argenteuil, a Parisian suburb, for market. Northern France is not
noted for having warm summers. No synonyms.
Ischia Black

A large black fig with light strawberry
pulp. Heavy crop of brebas: pyriform with a prominent thick neck; main crop
figs are smaller and more variable, Leaf: base calcarate; 5 lobes; latate.
Distinctive, rich flavor. Well-adapted in California. Very vigorous, but not
hardy. Often infected by mosaic which mottles the leaves, but does not seem
to effect the crop. One of the best where adapted. Good fresh and dried. Synonyms:
Franciscana, Black Mission.
Large almost black fruit
with a very deep red pulp and a distinctive, but agreeable acid flavor. Brebas
are pyriform with a thick, tapering neck; main crop figs are spherical or
pyriform to obovate, often oblique without neck. Medium eye. Leaf: base truncate
to shallowly cordate; middle lobe spatulate, side lobes latate. Probably needs
heat to develop the best flavor. Excellent fresh or dried. Well-adapted in
the South and Southwest. Fairly hardy. (Note: Condit calls this variety
Bordeaux. See the Introduction for a discussion
of this issue.) Synonyms: Beer's Black, Bordeaux, Petite Figue Violette, Violette
de Bordeaux. 

A medium bronze to brown fig with
light strawberry pulp. Brebas are pyriform with a prominent thick and curving
neck. Leaf: truncate to subcordate; 3-5 lobes; upper sinuses shallow and narrow;
margins serrate. A San Pedro type. Brebas only! Condit says the breba crop
is typically small. Not worth growing in parts of the South with late frosts
which destroy the fruit in most years. I discarded my own Royal Vineyard in
1995 since it had only produced two fruits in ten years. The plant is vigorous
and might deserve trialing in the North and West. Synonym: Drap d'Or
A small to medium fig giving two crops.
Leaf: deeply subcordate, 3 to 5-lobed with shallow sinuses, light green. Brebas:
medium, grayish-bronze with light pink pulp, oblique-turbinate to pyriform,
large and open eye. Rich and sweet. Main crop: delicate violet-gray with strawberry
pulp. Other characters, including flavor, are much the same as in the brebas
except for one distinctive feature: there is a heavy bloom on the body with
a very sharp demarcation line with the apex which is devoid of bloom. Note:
I do not have this variety and would very much like to acquire it. Synonyms:
Grisé Savantine Bifère, Grisé de Saint Jean, Grisé
Madeleine, Grosse Grisé Bifère.
A small to medium, unidentified,
black fig with good flavor. Well-adapted in the Northeast. The Belleclare
Nursery (no mail orders) in Bellevue, Long Island introduced it years ago.
You can find a listing of local varieties, not described in the literature,
but possibly very worthy of growing on the U.S.
Varieties Page.
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