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Figs

Angelo's Fig Tree

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In the Biggs-on-Figs segment for December 2020, we head to the Toronto suburb of Vaughan to get the scoop on the fig tree at Angelo’s Garden Centre.

Over the years Steven has had lots of people ask whether he knows of the tree. He sure does—he’s long admired it.

He finds out about the history of the 19-foot-high fig tree from Carlo Amendolia, owner of Angelo’s Garden Centre.

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Figs: A Taste of Home in a Country of Immigrants

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We chat with Montreal fig enthusiast—and fig tourist—Michal Hacio.

Hacio says that his passion for growing figs and meeting other fig growers started when he spent time living in Vancouver, where an Italian neighbour introduced him to fig growing.

A Taste of Home

Hacio says that in a country of immigrants such as Canada, people often bring something to connect them with their home country.

For many people, that something is a fig plant.

A Way to Connect

He finds that a shared interest in figs is a good way to connect with other people.

Hacio recounts the time he spotted a fig tree growing in the Westmount neighbourhhod of Montreal. He got chatting with the gardener…and by the time he was finished, he had heard the gardeners whole life story, including how the fig tree had been given to him by someone who was originally from Greece.

Overwintering Figs

Hacio has overwintered figs many different ways in Montreal. His key message for would-be growers is that there is more than one solution to overwintering figs in a cold climate. “Be creative,” he advises.

He’s met people who cart them into the basement, people who put the plants into a heated garage, and people who bury them.

“If you want to reap the reward of these fruits you have to be creative.”

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Fig Books for Northern Gardeners

 
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Growing and Sharing Figs in a Community Fig Orchard

Jack Spruill at the Spruill Farm Community Fig Orchard

Jack Spruill at the Spruill Farm Community Fig Orchard

In this interview that first broadcast live on the Food Garden Life Radio Show in 2018, we chat with Jack Spruill in North Carolina about the community fig orchard on his family farm and about his work developing a conservation project to protect the farm from future development.

Community Fig Orchard

Spruill explains that the farm grows very good figs. They were an important crop for his grandparents, who bought the farm in 1914.

But by the time his father took over the farm, things were starting to change. The figs still grew well…but they were no longer a money-making crop.

So his father started to let people come to pick figs for free. Along with fresh eating, there is a local tradition of making fresh figs into fig conserve.

The fig orchard was a community fig orchard even before he started to call it such.

Spruill says that these days, some people come to pick a few figs for fresh eating—and some still come for figs to make fig conserve.

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Want More Information About Growing Figs?

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What's New in the Garden, Q+A, Figs

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In our mid-July garden check-in, we talk about what’s new in our garden.

Currants

  • The currant and gooseberry harvest

  • How to use currants

  • Did you know that red and black currants are pruned differently?

Rhubarb

  • Looking for a delicious rhubarb recipe? Emma shares her favourite

Carrots

  • Sharing our failures…we stressed out one of our carrot patches so badly that the carrot plants went to seed. Oops. Carrots have a 2-year life cycle—when they go to seed in the first year, that’s a sign they could use a bit more TLC

Beefsteak Tomato Harvest

  • The tomato harvest is coming along nicely, after some worry about blossom end rot

Fig Q+A

  • Why are my fig leaves drooping?

  • What’s going on with my fig leaves?

  • How do I make my fig into a bush?

Steven’s new book, Growing Figs in Cold Climates: 150 of Your Questions Answered, will be out soon and is available for preorder. Buy now and save on shipping.

 

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REWIND: An Engineer Grows Figs in NJ

William Muzychko grows figs in New Jersey.

William Muzychko grows figs in New Jersey.

In a program first broadcast live on the radio show in 2018, we chat with Bill Muzychko of Bill’s Figs in Flemington, New Jersey.

Growing Figs in Containers

Muzychko grows over 180 varieties of figs—all in containers—and all in zone where they would not normally survive without winter protection.

Figs with Sub-Irrigation

Muzychko sets up his containers with a sub-irrigation system that provides the fig plants with a steady supply of water.


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Grow Figs Where You Think You Can't

In this book, I share lots of tips and ideas to help other gardeners grow figs in places where they are not normally winter hardy. It isn’t rocket science—and this book will give you the knowhow to grow figs.

Tips, techniques, and anecdotes, along with the insights from other fig growers, make fig growing easy for people who live in places where they think they can’t grow figs.

 
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Francesco’s Fig Tree

The Story of a Fig Tree that Brought Together a Community

Excerpt from The Food Garden Life Radio Show, June 2020

In the Biggs-on-Figs segment, Steven is joined by author Helena Moncrieff, who shares the story of a Toronto gardener whose fig tree became an integral part of the neighbourhood.

Moncrieff is the author of the book The Fruitful City.

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Henena Moncrieff, author of The Fruitful City, tells the story of Francesco’s fig tree

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Ocracoke Fig Festival

A Festival to Celebrate Figs

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Excerpt from The Food Garden Life Show, July 2019

Tune in for a chat with Sundae Horn, who helps to organize the Ocracoke Fig Festival on Ocracoke Island in North Carolina. This two-day festival takes place this year on August 16th and 17th, and celebrates figs through food, history, music, and all sorts of fig stuff. Find out more about the festival—and find the recipe for Ocracoke fig cake—on the website for the Ocracoke Preservation Society.

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Greenhouse Figs in Pennsylvania

A Greenhouse Grower Switches from Bedding Plants to Figs

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Excerpt from The Food Garden Life Show, June 2019

Tune in for a chat with John Biberich, a greenhouse fig grower in Grove City, Pennsylvania.

John and his wife Sue started growing figs and citrus as they were looking for unique crops that give them a place in an industry that’s increasingly reliant on automation and dominated by discount and big-box stores.

It’s a neat idea to consider for people thinking of how to carve out a niche in horticulture.

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Springtime Fig Shuffle

Springtime Fig Tree Care

Ross Raddi

Ross Raddi

Excerpt from The Food Garden Life Show, May 2019

Tune in for a chat with Ross Raddi. Ross is a 27-year-old backyard orchardist in the Philadelphia area who is passionate about growing his own fruit and vegetables. Ross talks about what to do with figs trees in the spring, as they start to come out of dormancy.

Find Ross on social media as @rossraddi.

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