medicsnoke
Member
Do you guys have any previous dealings with a company that I could order persimmon trees from, particularly a company that will ship to Ohio?
I have one Persimmon tree from Burnt Ridge Nursery in Washington State. They ship all over I believe. The tree is growing fine, I also have three apple trees from them. Each of them grows great. They have more positive comments then Neg, about them.
Do you guys have any previous dealings with a company that I could order persimmon trees from, particularly a company that will ship to Ohio?
Letemgo: How would persimmon trees do near Des Moines? I will have a new farm in that area..closing in November.
They are doing great in zone 5A....close to the IA line so I highly doubt anything by Des Moines should be the same zone as I am in. Those seedlings came from the MDC nursery so it is hard telling where exactly the original source came from within MO. Persimmons are non-existent in my area (have found one lone grove of wild persimmon in Mercer County). They are much more prevelant the farther south you go in MO so surely the source they came from is zone 6, but they are loaded with fruits in zone 5A. Congrats on the farm purchase. :way:
Thanks...
I will not be official owner until November... unfortunately it meant selling my other 80...but I will have more acres and a nix mix of tillable, timber and some hay ground/pasture that could be turned into habitat projects.
Looking forward to doing quite a few things, lots of deer on it already.
Trading up in acres is never a bad thing and it sounds like you can still make some income off the place and have lots of wildlife to boot. Remind me come November and I will mail you up some seeds off those persimmons. They are easy to start and I plant 20-30 seeds in a 5-gallon pot, keep them watered once they are seedlings in the bag and you will have more than you care to plant out at the farm.
They are stored in the fridge in damp peat all winter...they can have delayed germination tho and some may not germ till say June after they are planted out.
Will do, yes I am excited about the farm. Skip has been there, he gave me a stamp of approval
It's quite the place! I can envision what that place could look like in a couple years and it's a real gem! Got a solid foundation of how it breaks up, neighborhood, deer numbers and trees. Apples and pears out there would be great and I sure wouldn't hesitate putting some persimmons out. My old farm in van Buren county had many persimmons I planted and after 5 years, were going strong! That place is going to be a lot of enjoyment for you, congrats again!
I keep forgetting to fertilize my apple trees, would it hurt to add 10-10-10 now?
There are 37 trees in this orchard that we planted the weekend of October 7. Some of the varieties include Enterprise, Honeygold, Jonafree, Honeycrisp, Starkspur Arkansas Black, Prairifire Crabapple, Wildlife Crabapple, Profusion Crabapple, Manchurian Crabapple, Wolf River, Goldrush, Kieffer pear, Olympic Giant Asian Pear, Stark Honeysweet Pear, and Moonglow Pear.
Each tree was handled with extreme care and each got roughly 45 gallons of water that weekend, a rock mulch ring, a wood chip mulch ring around the rock mulch ring, three 6 ½ foot t-post, and 47 inch field fence held off the ground. I was unsure if we should take off the rodent tree protectors that came with the trees so we left them on and stapled window screen over them.
We also tied a rope from the supporting stake to the t-post in an effort to try and keep the wind from adding stress to the trees. The trees have received at least an inch of rain each week since planting which should help the roots get established before next summer’s stress.