Take your fig growing to the next level with variety selection strategies, advanced pruning, training systems, pest and disease management, and techniques for extending the harvest season.
Sarah Green
Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.
Introduction
You've grown fig trees successfully and want to improve your harvests, try new varieties, or expand your growing techniques. This intermediate guide covers variety selection in depth, training systems including espalier, comprehensive pest and disease management, and strategies for maximizing fruit production.
Advanced Variety Selection
Understanding Fig Classifications
| Type | Pollination | Characteristics | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Common (Adriatic) | Not needed | Parthenocarpic; home garden standard | Brown Turkey, Celeste, Kadota |
| Smyrna | Fig wasp required | Inedible without pollination | Calimyrna |
| San Pedro | Partial | Breba no, main yes | King, Lampeira |
| Caprifig | Male trees | Pollen source only; inedible | Wild figs |
Variety Selection by Climate
Hot, Dry Climates (Zones 9-11):
| Variety | Flavor | Size | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Black Mission | Rich, sweet | Medium | Classic; excellent dried |
| Kadota | Honey | Medium | Tough skin; ships well |
| Panache (Tiger Stripe) | Berry-like | Small-medium | Stunning striped skin |
| Peter's Honey | Honey, caramel | Medium | Outstanding flavor |
Humid Climates (Southeast US):
| Variety | Flavor | Size | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Celeste | Very sweet | Small | Closed eye; rot resistant |
| LSU Purple | Sweet | Medium | Disease resistant |
| LSU Gold | Mild | Medium | Yellow; rain tolerant |
| O'Rourke | Sweet | Large | Closed eye |
Cool Climates (Zones 6-7):
| Variety | Flavor | Size | Cold Hardiness |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chicago Hardy | Sweet | Medium | Excellent (Zone 5) |
| Brown Turkey | Mild | Medium-large | Very good (Zone 6) |
| Hardy Chicago | Sweet | Medium | Excellent |
| Violette de Bordeaux | Rich | Small | Good |
Breba vs. Main Crop
| Characteristic | Breba Crop | Main Crop |
|---|---|---|
| Timing | Early summer | Late summer-fall |
| Forms on | Previous year's wood | Current year's growth |
| Size | Often larger | Varies |
| Cold climate | Often lost to winter | Usually successful |
| Varieties (strong breba) | Desert King, Kadota | — |
| Varieties (strong main) | Celeste, LSU varieties | — |
Training Systems
Open Center (Vase) Form
Best for: Most in-ground trees; maximum light
Structure:
- 3-5 main scaffold branches
- Open center for light penetration
- Height managed at 8-15 feet
Training steps:
- First dormant season: Select 3-5 well-spaced scaffolds
- Remove central leader
- Head back scaffolds by 1/3
- Years 2-3: Develop secondary branching
- Maintain open center annually
Bush Form
Best for: Cold climates; dieback protection
Advantages:
- Multiple stems from base
- If some die back, others survive
- Lower fruit = easier harvest
- Self-renewing
Management:
- Allow 5-8 main stems
- Remove oldest stems every few years
- Maintain at 6-10 feet
Espalier
Best for: Small spaces; cold climates (wall heat)
Forms:
- Fan (most common for figs)
- Horizontal tiered
- Belgian fence
Setup:
- Install support wires 18" apart
- Train young branches to wires
- Prune to maintain 2-dimensional form
- Remove growth pointing away from wall
Advantages against walls:
- Extra warmth (microclimate)
- Protection from cold winds
- Easier winter protection
- Space efficient
Container Training
Size progression:
| Tree Age | Container Size | Expected Yield |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1-2 | 3-7 gallons | 20-50 figs |
| Year 2-3 | 7-15 gallons | 50-100 figs |
| Year 3+ | 15-25 gallons | 100-200 figs |
Pruning for containers:
- Keep compact (6-8 feet)
- Focus on productive wood
- Remove interior crossing branches
- Summer prune for size control
Integrated Pest Management
Disease Management
Fig Rust (Cerotelium fici)
Symptoms:
- Yellow-green spots on leaves (upper surface)
- Brown spores on leaf undersides
- Leaf yellowing and premature drop
Management:
| Timing | Action |
|---|---|
| Prevention | Good air circulation; avoid overhead watering |
| Early infection | Remove affected leaves |
| Moderate | Copper fungicide spray |
| End of season | Clean up all fallen leaves |
Anthracnose (Colletotrichum gloeosporioides)
Symptoms:
- Sunken spots on fruit with pink spores
- Dark-edged spots on leaves
- Fruit drop and mummification
Management:
- Improve air circulation (pruning)
- Avoid overhead irrigation
- Remove infected fruit immediately
- Copper-based fungicide at early stages
Fig Mosaic Virus
Symptoms:
- Yellow mottling on leaves
- Spotted, stunted fruit
- Premature fruit drop
Management:
- No cure; remove infected trees
- Control fig mite vector (Aceria ficus)
- Use virus-free nursery stock
- Sanitize pruning tools
Pest Management
Dried Fruit Beetle
Problem: Carries souring organisms into fruit
Solution:
- Choose closed-eye varieties (Celeste, Alma)
- Harvest promptly when ripe
- Remove fallen fruit
Fig Beetle (Cotinis mutabilis)
Damage: Adults feed on ripe fruit
Management:
| Method | Approach |
|---|---|
| Cultural | Harvest as soon as ripe |
| Traps | Bucket traps with fermenting fruit |
| Barriers | Fine mesh bags over ripening fruit |
| Biological | Parasitic nematodes for larvae in soil |
Spider Mites
Signs: Stippled leaves; fine webbing
Control:
- Spray with water to dislodge
- Horticultural oil
- Encourage predatory mites
- Avoid dusty conditions
Root-Knot Nematodes
Signs: Stunted growth; galled roots
Prevention:
- Resistant rootstocks where available
- Soil solarization before planting
- Marigold cover crop
- Avoid planting where known issue exists
Maximizing Fruit Production
Factors Affecting Yield
| Factor | Effect | Optimization |
|---|---|---|
| Light | More sun = more fruit | Full sun essential |
| Nitrogen | Excess = leaves over fruit | Moderate fertilization |
| Water stress | Mild stress can improve flavor | Reduce slightly pre-harvest |
| Crop load | Too heavy = smaller fruit | Thin if excessive |
| Pruning | Heavy = delayed fruiting | Moderate pruning |
Improving Fruit Size
- Thin fruit clusters if very heavy set
- Adequate irrigation during cell expansion
- Moderate nitrogen (not excessive)
- Remove breba crop to boost main crop size
Extending the Harvest
Succession of varieties:
| Timing | Varieties |
|---|---|
| Early (June-July) | Desert King, Kadota (breba) |
| Mid (July-August) | Brown Turkey, Celeste |
| Late (Aug-Oct) | LSU varieties, Violette de Bordeaux |
| Very late | Lattarula, Atreano |
Propagation
Hardwood Cuttings (Easiest Method)
Timing: Late winter (dormant)
Process:
- Select pencil-thick, 1-year-old wood
- Cut 8-10" sections with 3-4 nodes
- Make angled cut at top, flat at bottom
- Dip in rooting hormone (optional but helpful)
- Plant in well-draining medium
- Keep moist but not wet
- Roots in 4-8 weeks
- Transplant when established
Success rate: 70-90%
Air Layering
Timing: Early summer
Process:
- Select pencil-thick branch
- Girdle bark (remove 1" ring)
- Apply rooting hormone
- Wrap with moist sphagnum moss
- Cover with plastic wrap
- Roots develop in 6-10 weeks
- Cut below roots and pot up
Record Keeping
Track annually:
- Variety performance
- Harvest dates and yields
- Pest/disease observations
- Pruning dates
- Weather events (frost, heat waves)
- Winter protection (if used)
- Fertilization schedule
Conclusion
Successful intermediate fig growing requires understanding variety characteristics for your climate, implementing appropriate training systems, and maintaining proactive pest and disease management. The investment in proper variety selection and training pays dividends in consistent, high-quality harvests for decades.
Ready for more? Our Advanced Guide covers intensive production, commercial techniques, and detailed pest management protocols.
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