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Dont figs like warmth? Wouldnt bringing it in mean the fruit would set better?
I'm no expert on figs, but I think that they need cool but not freezing winters for their dormant/rest period.
Quite a lot of plants do strange things -sometimes becoming unhealthy- if they don't get their proper winter dormancy.
Have a search in this section for figs there's a fair few threads...
I had a bit of a 'thing' for wanting to grow some figs (not as many as Seahorse, but well that's another story!) and did a fair bit of research about figs & temperature. There are a fair few varieties that will withstand cold winters but with our limited summers you'd be better looking for figs that only fruit once a year - or if you get one that fruits twice, then take off the unripe ones.
Here's a link to someone who grows figs outdoors in Sweden!
I'm no expert on figs, but I think that they need cool but not freezing winters for their dormant/rest period.
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I'm not an expert on figs either, being optimistically about to plant mine oop North in Yorkshire. However I did live in South West France where we had three incredibly productive and luxuriant fig trees in the garden and also cold winters with snow, temperatures well below freezing for days at a time. So I think the problem with growing them in the UK may be more a lack of longer and hotter summers rather than cold winters. Spring came earlier, Autumn later, in other words a longer growing season.optimistically
I have (I think) 7 figs in pots. Not had an edible fruit yet (they're only young) but they have survived being outdoors in all weathers and temperatures.
My neighbours have a huge fig tree, planted in the ground, that gives a bountiful crop every year (happily, much of it reaches over the wall into my garden!).
I was feeling part of the scenery
I walked right out of the machinery
My heart going boom boom boom
"Hey" he said "Grab your things
I've come to take you home."
We have got two 5 or 6 year-old Brown Turkeys in pots, and they both fruited brilliantly last year, plus an ancient one in the ground (var. unknown, but it's Victorian so probably BT), that fruits q. well most years. The one thing we've found is that they all thrive on neglect! The potted ones last year actually had to spend most of the year tucked in a corner with hardly any direct light, and they produced 8 or 10 each!! The one in the ground is, in effect, potted, as it's planted the old-fashioned way: 3 'walls' sunk into the ground and rubble on the base - the fourth wall is to the shed it's planted against. Bear in mind, this is a very cold bit of our area, we are actually in a frost pocket, and plants have to grow or succumb, so if it were me, I would definitely try one, but maybe BT would be good for a start.
Thank you all so much for your input. I had a good read of them and the links SBP posted, and I think I'll probably opt for a 'Brown Turkey' in a pot after all, it sounds more suitable for our conditions (I liked 'Panachee' coz its all stripey and pretty, but you can't have everything).
I have a fig planted outside against a South facing wall in Glasgow. It has produced and ripened figs for the last four years, with no problems. It is an un-named variety, not Brown Turkey from the shape of the fruit. Panachee looks pretty, but I suspect that it may not be hardy outside. Brown Turkey, Brunswick or Violetta are reckoned to be the hardiest and most likely to succeed in the UK.
This page gives details of fig cultivation figs
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