I don't do the scientific thing.. I just play with them. Greg, I don't think it was dormant. I got the stump about 2 months ago. It was a huge sucker and when I tried to remove it with roots, I got no roots, it had none, it was attached to the main trunk. I brought home this 5 feet thing and I tried rooting it sideways, with the rooting end over the heating vent, but it was in the way, I tried under the bed with the rooting end over the vent, but we were tripping on it..then, I noticed the ends were drying out. At that point, I chopped it into several cuttings and put them all in a box to root. I put the box with cuttings upside down. They showed initials (just little white points)
It was then that I received the cuttings and decided to graft it into it. I experimented with every kind, with upsidedown T, with upright T, cleft, and whatever worked. once they were attached, I put it back in the rooting box for the roots to emerge. Another 2 weeks or so, I saw initial roots, so I planted in a large pot (skipped the cup) I put a plastic over the grafts and tie, so no gnats would get to the grafts. I put the large pot by my back door, not very warm there, but only place I could put it...it took a while for the buds to emerge, but they all did, except for one. So i removed all the bands and you see the result.
I like the shape and I like how it rooted regardless of no optimal temperature, because it is a local grown fig!
From my observation, the grafts do better when there is a nursing branch. So I have a few others that I waited for the cutting to show it has a node for nursing branch and I graft. I can decide later to cut the nursing branch or observe if the variety is good to keep. They are all unknowns at this time.