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  2. Want to Grow Figs In Your Own Backyard? It's Easier Than You ...

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    Once your fig tree is well established, ... Chicago Hardy. For a cooler climate zone, Douglas recommends Chicago hardy, which can survive soil temperatures of -20 degrees Fahrenheit (although some ...

  3. Fig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fig

    Mountain fig tree in Zibad. The common fig tree has been cultivated since ancient times and grows wild in dry and sunny locations with deep and fresh soil, and in rocky locations that are at sea level to 1,700 metres in elevation. It prefers relatively porous and freely draining soil, and can grow in nutritionally poor soil.

  4. How to Prune a Fig Tree for an Abundant Harvest ... - AOL

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    Fig trees (Ficus carica) thrive in USDA hardiness zones 8 through 10, though they can also grow in colder areas with proper protection.In addition to providing shade and beauty to your yard—not ...

  5. Ficus longifolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ficus_longifolia

    Ficus longifolia, the narrow leaf fig, is a species of fig tree native to Brazil. The natural habitat is the seasonally dry, monsoon forest . This plant is well known as an ornamental .

  6. Ficus lyrata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ficus_lyrata

    The fruit is a green fig 2.5–3 cm (1-¼ in) diameter. Ficus lyrata Warb. (known as fiddle-leaf fig) is an evergreen tree or shrub, native to West and Central Africa tropical rain forest, being one of the most demanding and showy Ficus species. It is known as a decorative species in Europe and North America (Florida) as well.

  7. Ficus citrifolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ficus_citrifolia

    How to be a Fig, Daniel H. Janzen, Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, Vol. 10, 1979 (1979), pp. 13–51 Phenological patterns of Ficus citrifolia (Moraceae) in a seasonal humid-subtropical region in Southern Brazil, Rodrigo Augusto Santinelo Pereira, Efraim Rodrigues and Ayres de Oliveira Menezes Jr., Plant Ecology, Volume 188, Number 2 ...