About This Plant
Ficus coronata ‘Bird’s Eye’ (Sandpaper Fig)
Ficus coronata ‘Bird’s Eye’ is an outstanding selected form of the native Australian sandpaper fig, chosen for its superior fruit quality, heavy cropping habit, and more compact, garden-friendly growth. Unlike seed-grown sandpaper figs, which can vary significantly in size, flavour, and growth form, this cultivar is more uniform, more productive, and better suited to home gardens and edible landscapes. It produces small, red-fleshed figs with excellent flavour, making it one of the most desirable native figs for cultivation.
The fruits ripen from red through to dark red and finally almost black when fully mature. At peak ripeness, they are sweet, soft, and pleasantly floral in flavour, making them highly enjoyable fresh off the tree.
Like most of our plants, the trees are grown in forestry tubes, which means the trees are still small, around 20 cm high.
Growth Habit & Cultivar Advantages
Compared to seed-grown forms of Ficus coronata, ‘Bird’s Eye’ is more compact, more predictable in form, and generally easier to manage in cultivation. It is typically grown as a small tree or large shrub, reaching around 2–4 metres in height under garden conditions, depending on pruning and site.
- More compact and uniform than seed-grown sandpaper fig
- Heavy and reliable fruiting habit
- Small red to dark purple-black fruit with excellent flavour
- Less variability in fruit quality compared to seed-grown plants
- Improved suitability for home gardens and small spaces
Pruning & Maintenance
Maintenance requirements are low once established. Light pruning helps maintain shape and encourages denser growth and improved fruiting. It responds well to pruning, allowing it to be kept as a smaller ornamental tree or managed shrub, depending on garden space.
- Prune after fruiting to maintain size and shape
- Tipping young growth encourages a bushier structure
- Can be trained as a small tree or multi-stem shrub
- Low maintenance once established
Leaves & Cultural Significance
The leaves of the sandpaper fig are rough and sandpapery in texture, a distinctive feature of the species. Traditionally, Indigenous Australians used the leaves as a natural abrasive material for finishing wooden tools, highlighting the plant’s cultural and practical significance beyond its edible fruit.
Growing Conditions
- Sunlight: Full sun to part shade (best fruiting in full sun)
- Soil: Adaptable to most soils if well-drained
- Water: Moderate water needs; drought-tolerant once established
- Climate: Suitable for a wide range of Australian climates, young plants are frost sensitive, survives light frosts once established.
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