Tripple Brook Farm

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Common Names: F

false aloe
Manfreda virginica
feather moss
Thuidium delicatulum
fern, American ostrich
Matteuccia pensylvanica
fern, boulder
Dennstaedtia punctilobula
fern, brittle
Cystopteris fragilis
fern, Christmas
Polystichum acrostichoides
fern, cinnamon
Osmunda cinnamomea
fern, evergreen wood
Dryopteris spinulosa
fern, fragile
Cystopteris fragilis
fern, hay-scented
Dennstaedtia punctilobula
fern, interrupted
Osmunda claytoniana
fern, lady
Athyrium felix-femina
fern, marsh
Thelypteris palustris
fern, New York
Thelypteris noveboracensis
fern, northern maidenhair
Adiantum pedatum
fern, oak
Gymnocarpium dryopteris
fern, royal
Osmunda regalis
fern, sensitive
Onoclea sensibilis
fern, walking
Camptosorus rhizophyllus
fescue, blue
Festuca ovina glauca
fig, common
Ficus carica
fire pink
Silene virginica
fishpole bamboo
Phyllostachys aurea albovariegata
fishpole bamboo
Phyllostachys aurea flavescens inversa
flag, blue
Iris versicolor
flowering dogwood
Cornus florida
flowering spurge
Euphorbia corollata
foamflower
Tiarella cordifolia
foamflower, Wherry's
Tiarella wherryi
fountain bamboo
Fargesia nitida
fountain bamboo
Fargesia nitida 'De Belder'
fountain bamboo
Fargesia nitida 'McClure'
fringed loosestrife
Lysimachia ciliata
fringetree
Chionanthus virginicus
fuki
Petasites japonicus

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Catalog as of June 25, 2008

Ficus

(Moraceae - mulberry family)
Around 800 species of mostly tropical evergreen trees, shrubs and vines. An important genus, providing edible fruit as well as a number of other useful products. Also cultivated as shade, ornamental, and indoor plants.

carica decid tree • ht to 30' • zones 7b or 8-10

common fig

Ficus carica - Aug 27


edible fruit, wildlife, sun
Mediterranean region

Cultivated since ancient times for its fruit. An ornamental, easily grown small tree; often shrub-like in cultivation. Begins bearing fruit at a young age - sometimes the first year. Hardy from the warmer portions of zone 7 southward, but can grow and produce fruit outdoors as far north as zone 5 if it is given winter protection. Various means can be used to protect fig trees for the winter. It appears that what is important is to keep the tree reasonably dry, and above about 10° F. Plastic sheeting and insulating materials such as dry leaves can be used to accomplish this. The amount of protection required depends on the severity of the climate. Fig trees are quite flexible, and even trees with trunks up to 3" or so in diameter can be usually bent to the ground without breaking to make it easier to protect them for winter. A very satisfactory approach to protecting a fig tree is to grow it, preferably planted in the ground, in a simple greenhouse. Just enough heat need be provided to keep the temperature from going below a safe level, which for a fully dormant fig tree would be about 10° F (for potted fig plants, however, it is safest not to allow the soil to freeze solidly). A greenhouse provides the considerable additional advantage of lengthening the ripening season for the fruit. Fig trees can also grow and fruit quite well when grown in containers. Fig trees tend to fruit best when the soil is on the lean, dry, side so that their vigor is restrained somewhat. Allowing the trees to become somewhat rootbound in containers will accomplish the same purpose. A fig tree which makes excessively vigorous growth is likely to produce little or no fruit. We offer the following cultivars of Ficus carica:

'Hardy Chicago'

Once established, this fig variety from a garden near Chicago can freeze to the ground in the winter and re-sprout in the spring to produce a crop the same year. The small to medium sized fruit is purplish-brown with strawberry pink flesh. Flavor is sweet and good; can be quite productive. Resembles the fig cultivar ‘Brown Turkey’. Does well in containers or greenhouse.

cat # 2C5J $14.95 each