Fig Orchard Pack
Ficus carica 'Brown Turkey', Ficus carica 'Chicago Hardy', Ficus carica ‘Little Miss Figgy’ PP27929
- Zones
- 7-10 outdoors
105 products
Homegrown apples, peaches, figs, berries and more — fruit that tastes the way it's supposed to, off your own tree, picked at the peak no grocery store can match.
Ficus carica 'Brown Turkey', Ficus carica 'Chicago Hardy', Ficus carica ‘Little Miss Figgy’ PP27929
Nothing from a store tastes like fruit you grow yourself. A peach picked warm off the branch, a fig that's actually ripe, a handful of berries still holding the morning on them — that's the payoff a fruit tree pays back every single season. Plant one and you're not just buying produce, you're starting a harvest that returns year after year and gets more generous as it matures.
There's a fruit tree for every yard and every appetite. Apples and pears for crisp fall eating and storage, peaches, plums and cherries for that fleeting summer-stone-fruit window, figs and berries that fruit fast and forgive beginners, and citrus for warm climates and sunny patios. Many come in dwarf and semi-dwarf sizes that stay easy to pick and prune, and plenty thrive in large containers if you're short on ground.
Start with two things: your climate and your space. Check your hardiness zone and pick varieties rated for it — and note that some apples, pears, and sweet cherries need a second compatible variety nearby to set a good crop, while peaches, figs, citrus and most berries are happily self-fertile. Give them full sun, six hours or more, with well-drained soil, and plan for a little patience: berries and figs can fruit their first year or two, while tree fruit usually rewards you a few seasons in. Once established, an annual prune and a yearly feeding are most of the work.
Shipped to arrive healthy. Every tree and plant is grown in our nursery network, inspected, and hand-packed in protective, season-aware packaging — and we honor the state-by-state agricultural rules that govern where fruiting plants can ship, so your order only travels where it's allowed.
It depends on the fruit. Most apples, pears, and sweet cherries crop best with a second compatible variety nearby for cross-pollination. Peaches, nectarines, figs, citrus, and most berries are self-fertile, so a single plant will produce on its own.
Berries and figs are the fast track, often fruiting within the first year or two. Stone fruit like peaches and plums typically begin in two to four years, while apples and pears reward a little more patience. Buying an established, well-grown plant shortens the wait.
Give them full sun — at least six hours of direct light a day — and well-drained soil. Dwarf and semi-dwarf trees stay compact and easy to pick, and many figs, citrus, and berries grow well in large containers if your ground space is limited.
Yes — just match the variety to your hardiness zone. Apples, pears, plums, and many cherries are cold-hardy, while tender types like figs and citrus do best in containers that can summer outdoors and overwinter in a protected spot.
Fruit trees and plants carry agricultural shipping restrictions that vary by state and by crop. Those rules are built into fulfillment, so your order is only sent where it's allowed to go.