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Plant Guide

Creeping Fig

Edible Family & Genus Fast Growing
admin March 25, 2026 6 min read

Creeping fig (Ficus pumila) is an evergreen, self-clinging vine (or groundcover) that’s famous for its two “personalities”: a juvenile stage with small leaves that tile tightly over walls like shingles, and a mature stage with larger, thicker leaves on free-growing, flowering shoots. It’s a classic choice for greening fences and walls, and in parts of southern China its fig-like fruits are traditionally processed for a refreshing jelly dessert. Like other figs, it releases a milky latex sap when cut.

Scientific Name Ficus pumila
Family / Genus Moraceae / Ficus
Origin Native to East Asia (including China) and widely naturalized and cultivated elsewhere. In China it is common in the wild across many landscapes (mountains, hills, and plains), especially where soils stay moist and fertile. It frequently clings to old trees, riverbanks, roadside trees, house walls, courtyards, and ruined walls, making it a familiar plant in villages and semi-wild places.
Aliases Climbing Fig, Creeping Ficus, Fig Ivy

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