Thanks GreenFin and I appreciate the info on your LSU Purple. I think mine will be OK since, next to the new cuttings, it's basically my youngest fig and does have a few figs showing. Most of the branches are still pretty thin, so I'm not sure how well they'd support the weight of any fruit this season.
I'm growing mine in a 15 or 20 gallon container (at least for now), so I'm definitely going to need to do some aggressive pruning.
I also have a Black Mission that's about four years old and hasn't fruited yet. If I was allowed to burn in my neighborhood, it would probably be headed there soon, although I haven't given up on it yet.
I don't believe it was a TC (I purchased it at about 1 year old from Excalibur Fruit Trees. I chopped it about 2 years ago, and while it has branched out, most branches have only grown maybe a foot or so in two years. I'd pinch the tips, but almost don't even want any more branching until the main scaffolding gets a little long.
The tree is basically fully wooded, and still no fruit.
I'm going to chop it way down at the end of the season and see what happens when it starts coming back. It was disappointing to have it not fruiting when it was one of only two varieties of figs I had. Now, by the time I see any fruit, I should have enough figs from enough better varieties that the Black Mission will likely be "anti-climactic"!
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Originally Posted by GreenFin
Great looking plants, Figaro! Thanks for sharing all those great pics.
I had also been growing a tc LSU Purple. At 24 months it was 6' tall, 10' wide, and 6' deep...and that was with being transplanted twice and severely pruned a couple of times (the occasional pics I've posted of it do it no justice at all). After 2 years it hadn't produced a figlet yet, so I recently removed it and sent it to the burn pile. Given HarveyC's insight (that tc's often won't fruit until a given trunk/branch is 5' long, and that at that point the thing to do is cut off a piece of the fruiting wood and start a new plant from that), and given my limited space in that tunnel, I decided to replace it with figs that are fruiting from the ground up.
I didn't entirely give up on my LSU Purple, though: I took a cutting from it last year, planted it outside, and it survived our sever winter unprotected (probably because I planted it 2' deep), so my hope is that by the fall I'll be able to get a fruiting cutting from it. (Same story with my tc Black Mission.)