Black Beauty 10 may well turn out to be Katleen's Black. Time will tell.......
----------------------
This is the kind of fig I have been searching for in South Louisiana for quite a few years now. Immigrants have brought over some real good fig cultivars in my area over the years. I knew that somebody somewhere is south Louisiana would have some awesome tasting unknown fig tree growing in their yard......and here she is!! I am very excited about this fig find.
What is so funny about this particular find is that the current owner does not care for figs at all.....no matter how rare the fig or how great they taste. Like I've stated, this tree produces the best figs I have ever tasted. To give some you some idea of how good the figs from this tree tastes. Here are some pf the figs that I grow and have tasted:
Black Beauty 10 tastes better than ALL of the LSU figs including Scott's Black, better than many different strains of regular Celeste, Black Mission, Col De Dame, VDB, Negronne, Black Celeste, Dark Portuguese, Sal's El, Gino's, Smith, St. Jerome, White Ischia, Native Black, Robin's Sicilian Black, Hunt, Sicilian Black, Italian Honey, Cajun Honey, Blue Bingo, JH Adriatic, Strawberry, White Triana, Green Greek, Black Triana, etc.
This one needs to be passed around to people who can really appreciate a good fig. It will be called "Black Beauty 10" (Black Beauty for the looks and 10 for the flavor rating) until we get a better ID on it. To be fair, I will probably be selling a few cuttings from the mother tree on eBay in the fall and maybe a few plants in the spring. I"m going to again visit the mother tree next week with my camera this time to get more pictures.
The leaf pattern varies on this tree....three and five lobes. It follows the typiecal fig leaf pattern characteristics that I have reported on in other threads. Namely that in the pruned area where "faster leaf growing rates" occur......a higher number of lobes with greater definition appears (5 fingers). In areas where the leaves grow slower.....they are three lobed.
FYI.......I have previous reported that it is the "gowing rate" of the leaves (from closed bud to fuly expaned leaf) that affects the number of lobes and the kind of definiton (serations, thumbs, etc.) that appears on a fig leaf as well as the fig tree's genetics. This "RULE" seems to be universal and it applies to every fig tree that I have ever seen or observed.
Dan
Semper Fi-cus