This tidbit about fig trees from George Christian Roeding's
biography caught my eye. "...there are individual specimen trees that have historic value by reasons of their immense size and heavy cropping. One of these, said to be over one hundred years old, is situated at Warm Springs, in Alameda county, with the trunk girth of seventeen feet, a glorious example of the longevity of the fig tree and a noble testimony to the vision and achievement of the Mission era of California in the founding of what has become the greatest fig producing section of the western world."
Seventeen feet! That's about three adults encircling the trunk with their arms.
Where is this tree today? Does it still exist? It would be about 200 years old now.
I asked our local tree expert, Nelson, and he suggested the fig tree at Rancho Higuera in Warm Springs.
And now I find out that Rancho Higuera literally means "Fig Ranch"!