Picture says it all about this particular tree. But for the differently abled folks using text readers, I am growing a fig in a way that most experts say not to. Figs supposedly require sandy loam and mild winters. I planted this one in a claybound bog during a cold spell in late winter and there was a freak blizard the next day. The picture shows the buds popping open with perfectly healthy leaves. But I have more to say about the method in general. I use the STUN Method for trees. STUN stands for Sheer Total Utter Neglect. It's pretty accurate, but the name does leave out some nuance. It's true that you basically do nothing to help an individual tree. But, there's a good reason for it. It puts selective pressure on the species. The more we care for plants, the more they will need our help to survive. If you want a perennial or even an annual plant to not need us, you have to plant them and forget them. The ones that need our intervention will usually fail to produce offspring. The ones that make it are the ones to keep around. In addition, I plant a lot of varieties, and a lot of seeds. I select for sturdiness straight out of the gate. I look for sprouts with thick stems and plant them out in adverse but not inhospitable conditions. Some don't make it.* To discover traits that allow you to grow plants in adverse conditions outside of their usual range, you have to plant seeds with parentage from more than one variety, and plant a lot of them, and then don't help them. Or if you do plant rooted cuttings or grafted cuttings, there's some slightly different rules. Rooted cuttings should be from as many kinds as possible. Grafted cuttings should have rootstocks that were grown from seed and have survived at least 2 years in the worst place in your property, even if you're going to plant them bare root elsewhere on your land later. It should be the most exposed area so it bears the brunt of the weather. It should also be the same or lower quality of soil as its final location.
*I planted 25 hazel trees from seed. I have 14 that have made it to 2 years old. But I have no doubts that they will survive here. These ones made it through an unusually warm winter, an unusually cold winter, being set up by a road, being in boggy ground, being in the shade of the north side of my house, and being accidentally hacked down by an old lady with a weedeater. (The weedeater affected plants mostly bit the dust, but 2 just came back from the root with multiple stems.)