I caught this fig tree growing behind other trees and weeds on county property in the wild. Took me a while to find it again because it is well hidden. I took pictures for your expert ID.
It is on a pretty steep hill, and I'll be wearing tennis shoes and gloves when I go out tomorrow at 5:00 AM to take some green cuttings for preservation and reproduction. I'll take as many as I can, take off all leaves but the tip, stick them in a big container in damp perlite / potting soil with a large water bottle stuck around them as a mini greenhouse, and try to get them to root as green cuttings. May take a month or two. When they go dormant, I'll repot into individual 3 gallon pots, and cross my fingers they bear fruit.
I was lucky to find a few figs on the ground. They were soft, but when I cut them open, they were not ripe. They appear to be a white variety. Some of the leaves are HUGE! The tree is loaded with figs. It is a wild fig. One of the cut figs has a strange shape. That is because I cut out the bird pecking expecting to enjoy a sweet breba, but evidently birds or wind knocked them off the tree prematurely. There is no visible irrigation, and the tree is doing fine.
Both figs were soft and pithy lacking flavor of any kind.
If you have any ID on this fig, I won't give it a name. If you have no clue, I might call it "Highland's Wild White," For now, it's "WildOne."
Suzi
Tomorrow I will post more pics of Catherine's Nacido Fig under that topic. I messed up on the shoots I took (not enough roots for the abundance of leaves), and learned that I did the whole thing wrong. She welcomed me back, and I have permission to cut as many green cuttings as I can, as long as I make her more trees! I already gave her two VdB, so she is a happy camper!