Hello Fico! Welcome to the forum.
I have been a member for a long time, but only pop into the forum now and then. I have time now due to a bad cold.
We have just enough trees for our family and neighbors. I have many favorites and welcome new trees now and then. I live in a Mediterranean climate in Southern California, USA, where it rarely freezes, and if it does, it doesn't last long. I start cuttings under an orange tree in the shade, laid vertically in the dirt in trenches. When they grow, they get potted until big enough to go to their final home in the ground, on our property. We are on a hillside overlooking a small town, and there are no fresh figs for sale in stores here either. You need to grow them if you want fresh ones, and I think I am the only person around here that does! I've driven the streets of this area, and never seen one fig tree, which surprises me since they grow so well here. There are huge commercial citrus orchards though, and we have citrus trees too.
Your fig photos are beautiful and the figs look tasty! After 4 - 5 years of collecting figs, there are some favorites that I keep back-up figs in pots. We do have gophers here, and they love the roots of fig trees. We all have specific things we like in a fig. I love sweet, honey, juicy flavorful figs. Not a fan of dry figs. I would not give up the Kadota or Mary Lane Seedless in the Yellow varieties. Green outside with red inside, so far Verte is by far my favorite, and my Bourgosette Gris that has never produced, has tons of figs on it so it might be a favorite too. I am not sure yet which dark fig is my favorite. Violette de Bordeaux is a little to dry in this climate for me. The birds got to Ronde de Bordeaux, so not sure. Hardy Chicago and Black Mission are equally good, but I don't LOVE either one. LSU Scott's Black is just a baby. Marseilles vs Black got planted on a side hill that is hard to navigate, so nobody got down there to taste it's fruit.
We have a saying here about trees planted in ground. "First year they sleep. Second year they creep. Third year they leap!" That seems to be the way of trees here. All my trees, grapevines and roses in ground follow that pattern. The first year fruit is never as good as that that comes when the tree is more mature. These things take time.
Enjoy the forum. Lots of knowledge here. Look forward to your posts.
Suzi