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You cannot tell from this picture, but the these fig tree roots stood almost 2 meters high near the trunk and spread out 6 to 7 meters in all directions.
the fig tree that used to sit on my desk at work. we smuggled the fig tree all the way to denmark where it no resides, unless it's in norway. i dunno, i miss that fig tree though
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Figtree Lane, Shettield.
On the left is No 14 - Victoria Chambers, c1800.
Former Sheffield Hospital for Women.
Grade ll listed.
In this building the original Sheffield Hospital for Women was founded with 6 beds on 29th June 1864. Transferred to Leavygreave Road as the Jessop Hospital for Women on 22 July 1878.
The Sheffield Chartists had their headquarters on Fig Tree Lane, possibly at No 13, the highest of the three-storey buildings on the right in this view.
I'm surrounded with figs...and that's a bad thing as I want to eat all of the fruit!
Also, my neighborhood squirrels and birds peck the tree. Every morning when I walk towards the tree, it tends to shake when all of the locals flee away from me.
© 2010 Tina Wong; The Wandering Eater. All Rights Reserved.
This Kirkland garden was just full and magnificently planted, and above it all was a very large fig tree. What you see here at the back, is just the lower-most branches of the fig. Gardening in the Pacific NW is incredibly rewarding, since the choices of thriving plants are practically infinite.