I began grafting in early May as the tree was coming out of dormancy. Despite my rather sloppy technique, that large batch had the highest percentage of takers. As I added more over the summer, I became less and less successful, not too surprising in south LA heat.
I had the best luck with whip, bark, and chip/escutcheon grafts. I had the worst luck with T grafts. I think timing is the most important element, early spring when the tree is pushing.
Only the Hardy Chicago made any figs to ripening, and they were as the tree was exfoliating with rust, so they weren't so hot and were small.
Interesting that some of the grafts seem less suseptible to rust, but I suspect that has more to do with the age of the leaves. The last old leaves of the rootstock are now finally falling, from rust, but the many small new leaves from the second blush are unmarred. I'll have to see if the difference remains when all the grafts break dormancy with the rest of the tree this spring, and all start making leaves at the same time. Or should I say at their appointed time, as some may retain characteristics for earlier/later spring blush. Can't wait to see!
I have many pots with cuttings of figs whose graft did not take and I have several varieties lined up with users here for use this spring. I hope to score a trip to the LSU orchard some time in late winter. LSU day was in July, and few grafts or cuttings survived.
My grafts seem to come in three varieties: survive and thrive; die outright; or surge then stall, or even die back in stages, sometimes with mini surges between the die backs.
some great links for those interested in graftin (also some great youtube stuff. Don't limit yourself to fig vidoes/info, the techniques are all the same)
http://figs4funforum.websitetoolbox.com/post/english-translation-of-axiers-how-to-graft-an-adult-fig-tree-4504717
http://figs4funforum.websitetoolbox.com/post/simple-stepbystep-grafting-5830743
Young Frankenstein is one of my earliest movie theater memories too, though I had just turned four when it was released, so it must have been a reshowing some time later. Plenty of humor for the little ones. Put. The candle. Back. I don't know if kids today would recognize all the classic monster movie references/spoofs.