Hi all I thought I would share my proudly rooted cuttings. I took them from an actively growing tree I passed on a weekend away. This tree looked really healthy and had tonnes of unripe figs on it, so I took 4 cuttings off it.
Thanks to everyone on the forum, as I have been lurking, reading all that I can and decided to use techniques I read on here!
This is the tree

I put the cuttings in the fridge for a week, and then used the back of a pair of scissors lightly to scrape away the brown bark until the green underneath could be seen. I then dipped them in a rooting homrone. I then put them in a cardboard shoebox with about 60% seed raising mix and 40% small perlite. I dampened the mix, and added a bit more water on 3 occasions. Today just over 2 weeks later this is what I was greeted with

Eventually I intend to put them in Tapla's 5-1-1 mix so today I mix up a mix with approximately 50% of the mix I rooted them in, 25% pine bark fines, 5% peat and 20% more large perlite, I also added a small amount of dolomitic lime. I hope this will prevent any shock when I transplant them into 5-1-1 later on.
And here is their new home!

This is actually the second time I have tried to root green cuttings. Way back in December I took 3 cuttings from a nice tree in the neighbourhood. I hadnt read much of these forums before doing this, and just dropped the bottom inch or so of the cutting into a pot of seed raising mix. Only now has my cutting started to even think about putting out a second leaf! About a month ago, after being in the soil for nearly 2 months there was a similar amount of roots as the plants a just potted today showing just how effective the shoebox technique actually is! I repotted this cutting over the weekend, and it has a fair few roots now, so lets hope it picks up pace a little from now on!