Pruning enormous fig tree

CREZIERES, France(Zone 8a)

Hi,
I have an enormous fig tree in my garden - well two in fact, but one is just too big - 35ft in diameter and about 20 ft high.
It is a purple fig that produces untold amount of fruit that is mainly shared between the birds and the worms. I pull about 50-100lbs of figs off each year, and give most away, in spite of loving figs.
I make jam, but mainly with the green/white figs in my back garden - that tree is about half the size and manageable.
So I want to reclaim the some of the large chunk of garden that has been acquired by Fig Tree Incorporated.
My inclination is to cut back the five or six major branches that radiate at the bottom level and which perform an elongated sine wave shape, rising up to about 3' above the ground before decending to the ground and then branching into fruiting spurs. I feel that cutting these back where they start to descend for the first time might be the best approach.
I am not bothered about loosing a year or tao's fruit... as I said.
Can anyone tell me is this is the right method.
Picture appended.

Thumbnail by cinemike
Contra Costa County, CA(Zone 9b)

I have a fig that grows like crazy, but the fruit is horrid, so I just cut it any ol' way, as hard as I need to to keep it out of my way.
It keeps resprouting where I cut.

To make a better job I would suggest pruning in an approved manner such as:

Cut to where a good branch comes out.
Thin rather than cutting everything back. Open it up, not turn it into a dense ball.

If you are not sure about the tree's response, prune only the most problem area then watch for the recovery. When you see how the tree responds then plan the next phase. Watch how fast the new growth shows up. See which direction it grows.

Victoria, Australia

Figs are pretty forgiving when it comes to pruning, so you can do pretty much whatever strikes your fancy. Cutting out the center to let more light in, and to promote the shorter bushy growth to make it easier to harvest and protect from birds.

CREZIERES, France(Zone 8a)

Thanks. Will plough ahead then...

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