CONTENTS.

Page.
[Edible Figs: Their Culture and Curing.] (By Gustav Eisen.)5
[Nature and structure of the flowers and fruit of the fig]5
[Classification of varieties of edible figs]6
[Varieties of figs found useful in California]7
[Caprification]10
[Climate suitable for fig culture]10
[Figs for drying]10
[Figs for table use]11
[Figs for preserving, canning, and home consumption]11
[Soil]11
[Propagation]12
[Seedlings]13
[Budding and grafting]13
[Planting]14
[Double trees]14
[Standard trees]15
[Pruning]15
[Drying and curing]16
[Picking]16
[Sulphuring]17
[Dipping fresh figs]17
[Drying on trays]18
[Degree of dryness]19
[Sweating and equalizing]19
[Artificial drying]19
[Packing]20
[Dipping]20
[Assorting]20
[Pulling]20
[Packing]21
[Pressing]21
[Fig Culture in the Gulf States.] (By Frank S. Earle.)23
[Propagation]23
[Soil and location]24
[Cultivation and fertilization]25
[Insect enemies and diseases]26
[Fig-tree borer]26
[Fig-leaf mite]27
[Root knot]27
[Fig-leaf rust]27
[Fig Cercospora]27
[Die back]28
[Root rot]28
[Varieties]28
[List of figs recommended by American Pomological Society]29
[Uses]29
[Marketing fresh figs]30
[Canning factories]31

FIG CULTURE.

EDIBLE FIGS: THEIR CULTURE AND CURING.
By Gustav Eisen.

The edible figs cultivated in the United States both for eating fresh and for drying all belong to one species, Ficus carica. Of this species there are now described about 400 varieties which are sufficiently distinct to be considered by the student and the practical horticulturist. The intending planter should study the character of the varieties more closely than has hitherto been customary in this country, though his safest plan is, of course, to plant in quantity only such varieties as have proved valuable in his own locality, or where soil and climate are similar.

NATURE AND STRUCTURE OF THE FLOWERS AND FRUIT OF THE FIG.

Before we consider these different varieties, a few remarks on the nature and structure of the fruit are necessary. The fig which we eat is really a receptacle, on the surface of which are situated the numerous flowers. But as this surface is concave, or curved inwardly, like the hollow of a closed hand, the flowers can not be seen except when the fig is cut. Then it becomes apparent that the chamber formed by the curved receptacle communicates with the outside by means of the “eye” at its apex. In some varieties the “eye” is almost closed, opening only when the fig has reached a certain age; in others it is so large that a pea could easily pass through. The flowers are always more or less fleshy, are generally imperfect, and do not much resemble the bright flowers of other fruit trees and plants in our gardens. There are four distinct kinds of fig flowers, but these are not always found in a single fig, in fact they are rarely all found together. They are designated as follows:

Male flowers.—These possess four pollen-producing stamens. They are found only in the wild or “caprifig,” the ancestor of our cultivated figs, and in a very few varieties of edible figs.

Female flowers.—These possess a single style, stigma, and ovary, and when fertilized, produce seeds. Owing to the absence of male flowers, or the failure of the male and female flowers in the same fig to mature at the same time, they rarely produce fertile seeds unless fertilized by pollen carried by insects.