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. Some 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.
A medium greenish-yellow fig with light strawberry pulp and good flavor. Turbinate
with small or no neck. Leaf: base is subcordate to truncate; usually 5-lobed;
middle lobe spatulate. Very subject to mosaic. Light breba crop. Well-adapted
in Northern California and the Northwest. Disappointing in the South as it
leafs out early and is susceptible to damage from late freezes. Good all-purpose
fig. Synonyms: Chico, Grosse Verte, Nebian, Strawberry, Verdone, White
Adriatic.
A medium to large fig with bronzy-yellow
skin and rich flavor. Oblique- turbinate. Leaf: base calcarate; lobes, lineate.
Well-adapted in the Southwest and drier areas of the South. The fruit is ruined
by excessive rain. Breba and main crop. Hardy. (Condit accepts Brunswick as
the correct name, but see the discussion of this name in the
Introduction.) Synonyms: Dalmatian, Madonna, Magnolia.
A medium to large yellow-green fig with
light strawberry pulp and rich flavor, bred by Ira Condit and released in
1957. Pyriform. Leaf: base cordate; 5 lobes, middle lobe spatulate. Well-adapted
in California and the Southeast. Fairly hardy. Worth a trial in northerly
areas. Synonyms: Adriatic Hybrid, Verdone Hybrid.
A medium to large, golden yellow fig with
strawberry pulp. From Condit's breeding program. I acquired this one in 1997
and failed to keep notes on its leaf shape. It has not fruited for me so I
could not record the shape and character of the fruit. A. J. Bullard of North
Carolina says it is an excellent fig. Apparently hardy. No synonyms.
A medium, greenish-yellow fig with amber
pulp. Brebas are oblique-pyriform; main crop are turbinate. Does not produce
heavy crops of either brebas or main crop figs. Leaf: base broadly subcordate;
3-5 lobes. The flavor is excellent cooler areas of California, but does not
hold up in hotter climates where Conadria is a far better choice. Late to
ripeneven after the first frosts. Genoa needs annual pruning. Synonyms:
White Genoa, White Naples.
A greenish-white fig, small to medium sized.
Pyriform. Leaf: base cordate;3-5 lobes; shallow sinuses. Vigorous and precocious.
Delicious fresh or dried. It is a rich, sweet, all purpose fig and the most
common canned fig. Well-adapted in the Southwest and drier areas of the South.
Requires heat to develop its best flavor and texture. Fairly hardy. Synonyms:
Dattero, Dottato, White Kadota, ad nauseum.
A high quality medium, green to greenish-yellow
fig with strawberry pulp. Pyriform to oblique. Base sub-cordate; 3-5 lobes;
broad, but shallow sinuses. A San Pedro type, it ripens a large breba crop
in late May to early June. It sometimes sets main crop figs without pollination
in cooler areas, but has never done so for me in the eight years I have had
it. Sweet and rich. Originated in California about 1920. Well-adapted in the
Northwest. Vigorous and hardy. Best fresh or dried. Synonyms: Desert King,
White King.
An old, reliable variety. Medium to
large greenish-yellow figs with white pulp. Turbinate with or without a short
neck. Leaf: base subcordate; 3-5 lobes; margins crenate. It has a small, but
open eye and will sour if left too long on the plant. Also subject to splitting,
if watered too much when fruit is ripening. Well-adapted in the South where,
known as Lemon, it is an heirloom variety. Slow growing. Condit calls it Blanche.
(See the discussion of this name in the Introduction.)
Hardy. It has a spritely sweet flavor and nutty texture (from the "seeds").
Good fresh, better dried and superb stewed. Synonyms: Bianci, Blanche, Lemon,
White Marseilles.
An unidentified, medium, yellow
fig said to have originated in California. Leaf: truncate to subcordate; unlobed
to 3 lobes; margins coarsely serrate. The fruit is very juicy and nearly seedless.
Well-adapted in California and the Northwest. I fruited this variety in 1997
and found it to be as good as A. J. Bullard and other Southern growers say
it is. Deserves more trials. Synonyms: Jelly, Seedless.
An excellent fig with an unfortunate
name. Leaf: cordate, 3 to 5 lobes, upper sinuses shallow, crenate margins.
Two crops. Brebas are oblique-pyriform with large, distinct neck, medium to
large, green tinged with violet and dark strawberry pulp. Good quality. Main
crop figs are slightly smaller, turbinate without neck or with a short one,
grass green with light pink pulp. Sweet and rich flavor. Quality and size
varies according to local climate. Brebas, for example, are good at Riverside
while the main crop is bigger and better on the California coast. I have been
looking for this one for five or six years and finally got a couple of plants
from some cuttings Don Polensky of San Jose, California sent me in early January
1998. Synonym: Grosse Monstreuse de Lipari.
A large light colored fig from the Dalmatian
coast of what is now Croatia. Leaf: cordate, variable shape from 3-lobed with
shallow sinuses and broad lobes to 5-lobed with deep sinuses and long, narrow
lobes, lobes commonly auricled, very shallowly crenate margins. Brebas: light-green,
oblique-pyriform with prominent neck, medium eye, dark strawberry pulp. Sweet
and rich. Main crop: large, turbinate mostly without neck, yellowish-green,
above medium, open eye, light pink pulp. Fairly rich flavor. Condit recommends
it only for coastal California. I got two plants from cuttings Don Polensky
sent me in January 1998. Now I can trial it here. No synonyms.| Home | Figs of Israel | Sycomore Fig | ||||||||||||
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