Had gotten a Barnisotte from Rolling River Nusery. It would have some "mule" shaped figs as well as insanely productive for a small tree, but would tear on right under the stem when ripening before it would ripen i guess because it was a fat fig and didnt have much of a neck. Wondering if this was the same Barnisotte.
@@RossRaddi I unfortunately lost the variety to lack of water in desert and don't have any photos but seems like the leaves did show signs of fmv but it didn't stop it from producing a lot of figs close together when it was in a pot.
Sounds like Barnissotte. I think I recall some strange figs last year. Partly due to FMV, but if you're seeing a lot of them, excess nitrogen is usually the cause of that.@@dracodempseyeisenhart3804
Would genetic testing be able to identify fig synonyms or is there still genetic variation between the same varieties?
Had gotten a Barnisotte from Rolling River Nusery. It would have some "mule" shaped figs as well as insanely productive for a small tree, but would tear on right under the stem when ripening before it would ripen i guess because it was a fat fig and didnt have much of a neck. Wondering if this was the same Barnisotte.
I bought it to find out actually. If you have photos of the fruits, please send them my way.
@@RossRaddi I unfortunately lost the variety to lack of water in desert and don't have any photos but seems like the leaves did show signs of fmv but it didn't stop it from producing a lot of figs close together when it was in a pot.
Sounds like Barnissotte. I think I recall some strange figs last year. Partly due to FMV, but if you're seeing a lot of them, excess nitrogen is usually the cause of that.@@dracodempseyeisenhart3804
Are these similar to Noire de Barbentane?
No. Not at all.
@@RossRaddithank you!