You can visit our Ficus page or browse the pictures using the next and previous links. If you've been inspired take a look at the Ficus plants in our garden centre.
Ficus benjamina - Weeping Fig
By Delonix1
- 26 Mar, 2015
- 2 likes
This weeping fig is growing in Fremont in the San Francisco Bay Area. Typically, this tree stays pretty small in the SF Bay Area. Photo taken March 1, 2015.
Comments on this photo
I've seen many F. benjamina trees in San Jose this size. There's several trees this size or larger located at a car lot across the 880 freeway from the Oakland Coliseum.
This tree is down the street from the Cape Chestnut on Roberts St. There's used to be three other F. benjamina trees on Roberts. They were the same size as this one and there for many years.
1 Apr, 2015
The problem with bay areans Andy, is..when a tropical gets frost damage in one of the very cold spells they always take it as killing the plant. They most times don't let the plant grow out of it,they cut the whole thing down.
Its tropical plant horticultural ignorance. Oh well.
1 Apr, 2015
I have seen that. I knew of a beautiful king palm which starting coming back faster than any other king palms I saw in Hayward...and it was cut down. If you remember the freeze of 1990, about two weeks later the weather turned unusually warm.
2 Apr, 2015
Photo 188 of 273
What else?
See who else is growing Ficus benjamina - Weeping Fig.
See who else has plants in genus Ficus.
Members who like this photo
-
Gardening with friends since
1 Oct, 2013 -
Gardening with friends since
14 May, 2014
-
Ficus Carica 'Brown Turkey'
£16.00 at Burncoose -
Fig 'Brown Turkey' (Fig)
£14.99 at Crocus
Holy Smokes!. Biggest F.benjamina I've seen here. I did see another as a street sidewalk tree in Richmond or Pinole. I was watching a live news story- and I could see it behind the reporter. It wasn't that big though.
Ok,what street? I might have to drive by. I still get doubters about growing subtropicals in the bay area. Usually the SF and Berkeley crowd who cant imagine a warm bay area summer day.
1 Apr, 2015