As mentioned ad nauseum, the 2013-14 winter conditions were apocalyptic for fig trees across the US. There are several threads discussing fig die-off, but none discuss that eventual production of the fig later that year.
With that said, due to the severity of last winter, this growing season should give us an excellent indicator of how hardy fig varieties are to stressful winter conditions.
Dennis' (snagplus) very informative thread (located here), provided good detail on his fig tree's growing condition, winterization, survival rate, die back and fig production during the following summer season. Moreover, a majority of his figs were not protected which is the "dream" maintenance we'd all like our fig trees to need to defend themselves for the upcoming winter.
I've taken the liberty to re-create his information into a data table which should provide all of us with data to make informed decisions on what types of figs do well "in-ground"/"in containers" following a stressful winter season. The spreadsheet is located here.
Please take a look at it and let me know if you think any other data points should be collected. At this time, I'm leaving the table open for editing so anyone can add data to the table. If you have done so, please respond to this thread letting us all know that you added data and for what varieties. If it looks like the table is getting corrupted over time, I may lock it down and ask that you provide you information in text form within this thread and I'll transcribe them to the table.
Any information you can provide on your fig survival & production rate from the last winter's season would be really helpful and greatly informative to fig newbs (such as myself) everywhere.
Thanks.
ps - the default sort on this will be according to fig name. If you have additional information you'd like to add to your fig, you can easily do so by clicking on the "F4F Name" column and then resorting to that all of the varieties that you added to the database are grouped together. After editing, please return the sort back priority back to fig name.