Rigo007
Administrator
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2021
- Messages
- 127
I know it's very early in the season for many but here in South Florida, you can already know which varieties have worked and which have not. Specifically when these trees are a couple of years old and you have seen how they react to such hot, wet and humid climate. Unfortunately for me, there are 3 varieties which will definitely be culled and no longer spend time in my collection next year. The 3 varieties, as of this posted date are:
Bourjassotte Grise: We ate some good figs off of this variety. It has a very unique flavor of spice and peppers. Slight sweetness and crispy skin. Similar to Socorro Black but Still trialing Socorro Black as it seems to do better in this climate (its faith is still unknown). As soon as it rains heavily, Bourjasotte Grise explodes wide open and invites all creators and bugs to it. Does not like heavy rains for not even 1 day.
Smith: What can I say..., it has simply not been a sought after variety for our family. I know..., some will hate my opinion but I am known for being shout out and ruffling up some feathers. That said, this variety is horrible, atleast for us. With or without rain, it just hasn't been a good tasting fig. When it rains, it literally squeezes like an orange letting go of a puddle of watered-down honey out the eye and if not picked soon after any rain, it will mush on the tree.
CDD Noire: So sad to let this one go. We got to taste a few perfect figs out of this variety last year. They were so good my daughter and I said it was one of our favorites! Good size, soft skin, strong sweet/berry taste and had a mild, scrumptious seed crunch which we enjoyed very much. However, it does not like heavy rains or much of it at all. Easily begins to spoil if it gets 3+ days of straight rains or splits.
As you can see, the trees are larger in size, healthy for the most part with little rust and loaded with figs. These images were taken after the rains had stopped today and I had pulled off all the bad figs. I'm in the fig game to find varieties that my family will enjoy, not for the name of it. It hurts me to get rid of them but it must be done for my purpose. I don't want an ornamental tree, I want a good producing variety which will do well with or without rains. I do not cover soil, put plants in storage or any of that to keep a variety.
The good thing is that I am also finding out which varieties do well here (some we don't or won't keep). Some handle longer periods of rain much better while other varieties aren't even faced by them. Some are top notch not because of their name but because of taste, productivity and handling of this climate. Those are the varieties we enjoy and are going to be up-potted to much larger containers next year.
I hope you all collect figs because you want what works for you not the other way around. Here are some pics of some figs we've been eating off some of these varieties.
Bourjassotte Grise: We ate some good figs off of this variety. It has a very unique flavor of spice and peppers. Slight sweetness and crispy skin. Similar to Socorro Black but Still trialing Socorro Black as it seems to do better in this climate (its faith is still unknown). As soon as it rains heavily, Bourjasotte Grise explodes wide open and invites all creators and bugs to it. Does not like heavy rains for not even 1 day.
Smith: What can I say..., it has simply not been a sought after variety for our family. I know..., some will hate my opinion but I am known for being shout out and ruffling up some feathers. That said, this variety is horrible, atleast for us. With or without rain, it just hasn't been a good tasting fig. When it rains, it literally squeezes like an orange letting go of a puddle of watered-down honey out the eye and if not picked soon after any rain, it will mush on the tree.
CDD Noire: So sad to let this one go. We got to taste a few perfect figs out of this variety last year. They were so good my daughter and I said it was one of our favorites! Good size, soft skin, strong sweet/berry taste and had a mild, scrumptious seed crunch which we enjoyed very much. However, it does not like heavy rains or much of it at all. Easily begins to spoil if it gets 3+ days of straight rains or splits.
As you can see, the trees are larger in size, healthy for the most part with little rust and loaded with figs. These images were taken after the rains had stopped today and I had pulled off all the bad figs. I'm in the fig game to find varieties that my family will enjoy, not for the name of it. It hurts me to get rid of them but it must be done for my purpose. I don't want an ornamental tree, I want a good producing variety which will do well with or without rains. I do not cover soil, put plants in storage or any of that to keep a variety.
The good thing is that I am also finding out which varieties do well here (some we don't or won't keep). Some handle longer periods of rain much better while other varieties aren't even faced by them. Some are top notch not because of their name but because of taste, productivity and handling of this climate. Those are the varieties we enjoy and are going to be up-potted to much larger containers next year.
I hope you all collect figs because you want what works for you not the other way around. Here are some pics of some figs we've been eating off some of these varieties.