Complete Guide To PRUNING PERSIMMONS: Winter Pruning ASIAN PERSIMMON TREES

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  • Опубликовано: 21 янв 2025

Комментарии • 166

  • @tmango78
    @tmango78 24 дня назад +1

    Watched about 30 videos on pruning persimmon trees, and this is the only helpful one. Thanks

  • @bza069
    @bza069 Год назад +7

    i am VERY impressed by these videos. The host is all content and no fluff or nonsense. Seems like I am in a classroom. Great stuff

  • @karenluck7273
    @karenluck7273 2 года назад +24

    I really needed this video today! Yesterday I pruned all the dead, crossing, and awkward branches on my second season trees, but then I chickened out over doing the hard stuff 😩 Today I feel confident I can tackle it! Thanks so much as always

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад +3

      I’m glad this could be helpful. Pruning is an art. Don’t be afraid to do it, and remember, it’ll grow back.

    • @marydorr6322
      @marydorr6322 2 года назад

      P

  • @sahmadi1000
    @sahmadi1000 Год назад +1

    Best pruning lesson in the world! THANKS

  • @yellowdog762jb
    @yellowdog762jb 2 года назад +13

    Good video! I've been watching a number of pruning videos lately, and you've done an excellent job of explaining what needs to be done and why. Your tree looks great!
    Some of my fruit trees are very young, some are 15 to 18 years old. I have some peach and plum trees that I planted last year as well as some citrus that I planted to replace mature trees killed in the big Texas freeze.
    Fortunately, I pruned my Fuyu early on very similarly to how you've done yours. My Fuyu is about 18 now and I've had years when I pruned it perfectly, and other times when I didn't get around to pruning it at all. Consequently I've had years with awesome fruit production, and other years when it's been terrible. The two biggest mistakes that I've made in the past are: 1) Over pruning and cutting off too much of last year's fruiting wood, thus getting very low production, 2) Not pruning enough and ending up with lots of small and inferior fruit. That also triggered a slow year the following year due to the tree wanting to alternate years to bear fruit.
    My Fuyu has gradually gotten too tall for me to pick fruit from the uppermost branches without climbing an 8 ft ladder. I had a ladder collapse under me last year while pruning a crepe myrtle and I narrowly escaped severe injury. I'm in decent shape so I sort bounced a bit, but I was also very lucky. Climbing a ladder in any outdoor situation can suddenly become very dangerous. If you have to do it, you really should have a spotter.
    I'm going to be doing a pretty severe prune on my persimmon and pear trees this year to get them back to more practical and safer heights. I know it's going to probably cost me this year's fruit production on the persimmon though. I've debated on doing only 1/3 to 1/2 of the tree per year over the next few years but I've about decided against it. The Fuyu is a pretty tree, and it's located in a spot that a visual focal point of the yard. So I want to keep its balanced shape. Therefore I'll probably just take the hit on this year's fruit production.
    You appear be following a plan similar to what I did many years ago. When I bought my house the back yard was 100% grass. There were zero trees or beds. Before buying fruit trees I spent time looking out of the windows of the rooms with a view to the backyard to identify the main focal points. Then I went out to the patio and looked again, also paying attention to the neighbors homes and noting the windows that overlooked my yard. I planted more attractive trees in areas that were visible from inside my house; and I also made sure to put evergreens, like citrus trees, where they'd block neighbor's windows to give us more privacy. I also planted my trees where the crowns were about 6 to 8 inches above grade. I surrounded them with temporary boarders and eventually filled in between the trees with above grade beds containing ornamentals and hummingbird/ butterfly attractants. Our soil is a thick clay gumbo soil that makes gardening a challenge, so all of our beds are built above grade so that they drain well. I have a slightly oversized suburban back yard, but by planting the trees along the perimeter of the yard on 16 foot centers I was able to plant about 18 fruit trees while still allowing room for berry bushes and a small garden. And the center of the yard is still open and sunny. Most of the non citrus are pruned in an open vase shape, or similar to what you demonstrated in this video. The fruit trees don't really look like fruit trees when they are green, but three seasons of the year the yard is surrounded by a lush green privacy barrier that just happens to produce fruit. Plant your trees proud (crowns higher then the surrounding soil level) if you anticipate surrounding them with flowerbeds one day. Roots can grow down if the tree is a little high. But the roots will rot if your tree's root ball is planted too deep.
    You made another good point. If you make a pruning mistake there is a very good chance you can fix it later. Also, a backyard grower doesn't have to always prune exactly "by the book". Yes, that's the way to insure maximum fruit production; but for yard trees, pruning the trees so that they look nice, or provide shade or privacy, are legitimate reasons to vary from the book.
    BTW, once you start getting some significant fruit production from your Fuyu, consider drying some of the fruit. I use an inexpensive electric food slicer, similar to what they use in a deli to slice lunch meat. I slice my persimmons into slices a tad bit thicker than you'd cut a tomato for a burger. Then I dehydrate them. They make amazing snacks that look and taste great!
    One last thing. Fuyu persimmons will finish ripening off the tree. You can pick them a bit early, before they are fully ripe. They will taste just as good once they ripen as they would if you'd left them on the tree. But you won't lose as many fruits to birds, critters, or stink bugs. Same thing with tomatoes, for those that don't know.

    • @ooohlaa13
      @ooohlaa13 2 года назад +1

      thank you much careful thoughts here, very helpful!

  • @willlin3017
    @willlin3017 Месяц назад

    Great expression and clear pronunciation, and a handsome cub!❤

  • @djdimsum852
    @djdimsum852 7 месяцев назад +4

    Please make a summer pruning follow up. Thank you.

  • @squidikka
    @squidikka 2 года назад +4

    I was just thinking about pruning my Fuyu into an open form because I figured it made the most sense. I didn't even know about the modified central leader form. Thank you for this, will do it tomorrow!

  • @ReneSicat-t4p
    @ReneSicat-t4p 7 месяцев назад +1

    Impressive video! Very detailed, complete, easy to follow. Thank you!😀

  • @paulmoss7940
    @paulmoss7940 2 года назад +2

    That was a really good explanation. Thanks ,I'll by using this in February.

  • @kimlee1511
    @kimlee1511 2 года назад +3

    Most educational video Enjoy every seconds.

  • @traxmom
    @traxmom 2 года назад +5

    This is great, thank you for explaining persimmon pruning.

  • @TnTranN
    @TnTranN 2 года назад +3

    Awesome presentation my friend!

  • @supernovahk19
    @supernovahk19 2 года назад +1

    A must do thing, just can’t help it, always fast forward to see ✨Dale✨💕 first.. as always, great information.

  • @vincam4674
    @vincam4674 2 года назад +1

    Some really great tips, hello from Australia.😀

  • @ninadardi7748
    @ninadardi7748 2 года назад +1

    Thank you. Very informative. I planted one persimmon this season. It was loaded with flowers. It was potted in huge pot. When I pulled it out it looked as if it was potted from a 3 gallon pot into a 4 times or more the size of the roots. I had dug double the size of the pot. I think it may have shocked the roots when I pulled it out from the pot. 95% of the flowers fell and some branches dried out. I have about 5 or 6 fruit that are growing. I hope it will grow some new shoots befor winter. I will use this method 😊👍

  • @sequoiawarner6756
    @sequoiawarner6756 Год назад +1

    Just about to plant a persimmon, thanks for the the pruning tutorial!

  • @ArtSnow-p9p
    @ArtSnow-p9p 4 месяца назад +1

    Why pruning is important, besides maximizing fruit production: It keeps the limbs from getting too long to bear the weight of the fruit. This year, our five plus year-old Korean persimmon tree is ten feet tall, and under pruned. It's September 3 in Maryland, and the fruit is golf-ball size. All of the limbs are sagging a foot, or more. We are supporting the limbs with sticks. We have removed a foot of length of the limbs (with some fruit attached). This winter/spring it will have its limbs shortened a foot or two more. Last year, we got over 100 apple-sized persimmons from it. We await this year's harvest. Thus, pruning helps prevent limb breakage from excess fruit weight.

  • @SamuelPerkash
    @SamuelPerkash 5 месяцев назад +1

    good information thanks your 🎉

  • @user-gk-y8t
    @user-gk-y8t 2 года назад +3

    Great tutorial. Thankyou.

  • @alexamattheu7139
    @alexamattheu7139 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this video. My persimmon I purchased 3 years ago is very healthy but hasn’t fruit. I will try to prune it his year and hopes it fruits next year.

  • @bannguyen5057
    @bannguyen5057 Год назад

    Thank so much for your videos! 10:10 If I did not see you cut the strong healthy branch I would NEVER be able to trim my Persimmon trees to form them the way I want them to grow! You are right cut then step back then cut more the unnecessary left previously cutting! Questions: In the last 2 years from the young to the matured trees leaves are curb! Next, when trees grown from seeds bearing fruits? Happy New Year! From Maryland.

  • @stackingstowbuk1260
    @stackingstowbuk1260 2 года назад +2

    Very informative video, good job

  • @ericwiltz6584
    @ericwiltz6584 2 года назад +1

    Very nice presentation. One of the biggest hurdles for Gardners to overcome is pruning, especially peaches!

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад

      That is true. Many are afraid to prune their trees, but it must be done for optimal fruit quality. Thanks for watching!

  • @Natalya-G52
    @Natalya-G52 2 года назад

    My persimmon is 3 yers old in the ground, maybe he was 1 yers when I bought him, it’s Ichi Ki Kei Jiro , last year I have at least 30 beautiful persimmons. I never prune, and I miss this year winter pruning (never herd about) until today I see your video. I’m in costal SC and my tree has leaves all over. I will be waiting for summer pruning and watching your video. Love my persimmon

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад +3

      I have that variety in-ground on the opposite side of my yard. That is a particularly dwarfing variety, and only grows to be about half the size of this Giombo. I recommend pruning in early years to develop a proper structure of the tree. Otherwise, it will naturally be less balanced and have a lot more shading. Fruit trees, when allowed to grow naturally, grow fruit to produce seed. Their goal is to produce as much seed as possible, so they will over-produce smaller, lower quality fruit. If you want to have higher quality, larger fruit, you need to prune your tree for balance in the winter and thin fruit in the summer.

  • @leopardwoman38
    @leopardwoman38 Год назад

    Excellent video! Thank you! 👍👍👍👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼😀💕🌱🌱

  • @SeahorseWorkshop
    @SeahorseWorkshop 2 года назад

    Informative. Liked. Subscribed. Keep up the good work.

  • @mbm2355
    @mbm2355 Год назад

    I've got some one, and two-year trees we just potted, that are basically 7 foot tall whips with 2-3 little spindly offshoots. Modified central leader seems like the best choice, but it might be a bit too late. Thanks for the video!

  • @ihus9950
    @ihus9950 9 месяцев назад

    Great information Thank you 👍🏻

  • @arabellalunkes4532
    @arabellalunkes4532 Год назад

    Excelente pruning video! Thank you!

  • @sylvia10101
    @sylvia10101 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for the helpful info😊👍

  • @shirleyhuang4957
    @shirleyhuang4957 2 года назад

    Very clear. Thanks very much.

  • @christinedurant2512
    @christinedurant2512 Год назад

    How do I get my v shaped 2 year old persimmon tree that I grew from a seed to branch in different directions. It started as one stem then 2 open v like stems and I am noticing that pattern repeating as the v shape becomes more pronounced

  •  Год назад

    Çok güzel budama oldu. Tebrikler.

  • @nonsquid
    @nonsquid Год назад +6

    I never thought that I would see a winter pruning video from a guy in a t -shirt and shorts. All those persimmon tree trimmings could be sold as scions.

  • @shekharmoona544
    @shekharmoona544 2 года назад +1

    Great video.

  • @LadyGoza
    @LadyGoza 10 месяцев назад

    I accidentally planted my fuyu and saijo trees in partial shade. They are about three feet tall. Is it too late to move them to another part of the yard where they can get full sun? The fuyu is just budding tiny leaves. The saijo hasn't come out of dormancy. I also planted them 5 feet apart to keep them small. Is that ok for persimmon trees? Thank you!

  • @benoitphilibert9316
    @benoitphilibert9316 Год назад

    Thank you. You are such a great, smart and handsome guy.

  • @Crunchypickles124
    @Crunchypickles124 Год назад

    I would love to see this tree later in the year with leaves snd fruit.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Год назад

      I'm actually editing a video right now for Monday that will feature my persimmon with full foliage and fruit.

  • @joecabral7925
    @joecabral7925 Год назад

    Can you tell me what fertilizer you’re using for the persimmons tree.they look so good. I love you’re videos.good job my friend.

  • @AncientHippie
    @AncientHippie Год назад

    I try to keep my fruit tree profiles low as well but if they get tall I saw this great idea and made one. Take a 2x2 and a plastic 1/2 gal milk carton. Cut off the bottom and cut a small v in the bottom. Attach that milk cartoon to the 2x2 with the open bottom facing up and the v out. You can then get any fruit up high without a ladder just line the fruit into the opening with the v at the stem. Push up and the v separates the fruit.

  • @VivienneDunlop
    @VivienneDunlop Год назад +1

    It was difficult to see what you were doing because the fence behind the tree is the same colour as the tree branches. Maybe place a white background

  • @32dworth
    @32dworth 2 года назад +1

    Anywhere around Charlotte NC that you recommend purchasing persimmon trees? I would like to be able to go in person and pick out and not just order online.

  • @matthewnguyen5829
    @matthewnguyen5829 15 дней назад

    This is amazing! I am buying a tree this spring because I just found out they grow in my area and this was my childhood fruit growing up in California.
    Would it hurt the tree if I pruned it to stay only about 8-10 feet tall? Or should I let it grow taller? I don't particularly want a super tall tree that makes it hard to maintain and I don't want it too too wide that it looks overgrown since it will be i my front yard.

  • @afrocraft1
    @afrocraft1 Год назад

    I don't understand the cut at 11:55. If you're going for a modified central leader, shouldn't you let just _one_ leader dominate the entire plant? Isn't how you eventually pruned it more like open-vase type?

  • @nakamura7491
    @nakamura7491 Год назад

    the fence is superb, how much did it cost?
    how to prevent d. lotus from becoming infected with the fungus, would you graft kaki on d. lotus that is infected, that is, it has blackness in the middle of the tree?

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Год назад

      The fence is 4 years old, so that was well before lumber prices skyrocketed. At the time, the cost was $20/LF. I'm sure it's more expensive now. I would not plant any persimmons in Lotus rootstock here in the US, because d. virginiana is native to the US and is mostly "bulletproof" as they say. All my persimmons are on d. virginiana for that reason, because d. virginiana is native to my area and grows wild here. I would absolutely not graft anything onto infected rootstock.
      If you don't live in the US, I'm not sure what the rules are.

  • @yijiemao2562
    @yijiemao2562 Год назад

    I really hope that I watched this video before, it's a great video. I have an aisn persimmon tree is definitely "open center ", how can I make it to a " modified central leader " shape?

  • @adogonasidecar1262
    @adogonasidecar1262 3 месяца назад

    @TheMillennialGardener
    Could you please do an update on this tree after 2 years? It'd be great to see how it grew from this pruning. Thank you!

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 месяца назад

      I post about it regularly. You can see last year here: ruclips.net/video/o4rYiy7qriE/видео.htmlsi=N_ik4MT2g5plSAYz
      We are moving into persimmon season now.

  • @ainati6121
    @ainati6121 Год назад

    We lived in NC and our persimmon tree is in it's 2nd year this year 2023. When do we need to prune it?

  • @livesoutdoors1708
    @livesoutdoors1708 2 года назад +1

    Thank you!

  • @cherylhuyck4622
    @cherylhuyck4622 2 года назад

    Very helpful video and I am now better prepared to tackle my fuju persimmon. I've only done miner pruning to my 5 year old tree. Can I assume its never to late to properly prune and shape the tree? I'm going for it next month after ordering recommended saw. Wish me luck.

  • @Jyoh2301
    @Jyoh2301 2 года назад +1

    i noticed that you didnt prune the lower and much closer to the ground, smaller branches under the main trunk. Wonder why you left them out?

  • @Joshsmoove
    @Joshsmoove 10 месяцев назад

    How far away from the fence is your persimmon planted? I'm planning my planting process now.

  • @Timamoun1
    @Timamoun1 2 года назад +1

    Hi, I hope you read this message. First of all, thank you for the video about the dwarf tomatoes. I'm in Alberta zone 3 with 110 frost-free days. Tomatoes never really perform well for me. I never heard of victory seeds before. I find some great variety caters to my zone. You should do a video for short-season gardeners like me. Thank you.
    .

  • @artsnow8872
    @artsnow8872 2 года назад +2

    I tell people, "You don't prune a fruit tree to make it pretty. You prune it to make it bear the most, best fruit. An ornamental tree is different --- you trim it pretty."
    A completely open center isn't the most productive. The central volume, when pruned correctly, can receive air and light and, thus, can bear more fruit.

  • @solarroofing8072
    @solarroofing8072 2 года назад

    awesome. persimmons grow so well in NC. They are native to the SE USA.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад

      These are Asian persimmons, so they actually can be problematic in the US. The reason why is because in their native location, they do not have late frosts and freezes like we do. While the hardiness zone and latitude is similar, in East China and Japan where these trees hail from, they have abrupt transitions from winter to spring with rare last frosts and freezes. Transition from winter to spring is very gradual in the eastern US with many cold air outbreaks, and these trees usually bud out before frosts and freezes stop in the US because they didn't have to evolve dealing with them. They tend to take late frost damage every year as a result, which is always a challenge.

    • @solarroofing8072
      @solarroofing8072 2 года назад

      @@TheMillennialGardener good to know maybe I'll get some of those white winter protection covers just in case. mine are already budding out. I did have a few die from late frosts over a decade ago.

  • @colindylan100
    @colindylan100 Год назад

    I have carefully studied your video and came out to prune my two persimmons tree ( 3 years old)
    I pruned them in the 3rd week of Mar. and now at late May , there are no blooming or sign of green leaf anywhere , on both trees , wish I can put a pic into here .
    Is that a sign of my trees are dead ? Should I wait a little longer of just get rid of them ? Thanks .

  • @timcheng8165
    @timcheng8165 Год назад +1

    I have a one year-old fuyu persimmon tree thin and stands at 6’. At what age should I start winter pruning it?

  • @markvhidalgo
    @markvhidalgo Год назад

    Needed this

  • @werewasyo
    @werewasyo Год назад

    or just get a pole pruner to harvest the fruit if it's too tall?
    also, are you saying after budding and tiny leaves develop, to avoid cutting off branches? it's already spring, and i forgot to winter prune. is it too late?

  • @artielang2
    @artielang2 Год назад

    Thank you

  • @MS-de7bb
    @MS-de7bb 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks mate

  • @stevegaines-vq3bd
    @stevegaines-vq3bd 8 месяцев назад

    good job...i subscribed

  • @BrovaKain_357
    @BrovaKain_357 Год назад

    I recently purchased a 6ft. Matsumoto persimmon tree. My back yard space is tight and i have some other fruit trees. I want the height and width to be managable( no more than 10 ft tall x 5ft w). If I clip the central leader to 3ft will that help? Are you familiar with Matsumoto persimmons? Love the channel as well!!

  • @martingardens
    @martingardens Год назад

    Use a Japanese folding saw that you can stick in your pocket.
    The double-edged saw he is using is more for lumber than for tree work. The blade is thinner than a folding saw so it's more likely to snap when cutting pine, for example, that will deposit pitch on the blade and tends to bind on the push stroke. Japanese saws are draw saw, that is, they cut on the pull stroke. Hence, Japanese blades are thinner as a blade is good under tension but not compression.
    Also, cuts will be tighter to the work if you hold the blade close to the leader and not the hook. I spin it in my hand as I move up the trunk.

  • @CurlyHairDntCare
    @CurlyHairDntCare Год назад

    I just purchased a tree from a nursery. I want to change it to modified center leader. It just went in ground and already fruiting. Is it safe to make the large cut to change it to modified center leader?

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  Год назад

      If you significantly alter it while it's growing and fruiting, you may cause it to drop its fruit. Especially if it is a deciduous tree, I'd probably wait until it went dormant in the winter to prune it. Especially if you just planted it, since your real goal this year is to get it to grow roots. Heavily pruning it now could shock the tree.

  • @allenmorrill7534
    @allenmorrill7534 2 года назад +3

    Great video and very informative! The only flaw I see is leaving the codominant stem which is an extremely weak point and will most like split when either of those start to bear fruit

  • @deannadimain8986
    @deannadimain8986 2 года назад +1

    When is the best time to fertilize my persimmons trees. What kind of fertilizer should I use. How should I apply them? Thank you.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад +3

      The procedure for fertilizing established deciduous fruit trees planted in ground are almost all the same. You do your initial fertilizing 2-4 weeks before your last frost date to help boost the tree when it's getting ready to bud out, another fertilizing in late spring, and another fertilizing in mid-summer. Then, you stop fertilizing them, because you don't want to encourage new growth in the fall when the trees need to go dormant. At the first fertilizing prior to your last frost, always add a new layer of compost and mulch.

    • @HaiNguyen-cw7gd
      @HaiNguyen-cw7gd 4 месяца назад

      Can you tell us how many cups for establish tree? What month is late spring in zone 8? Is it end of May for late Spring and July 15 for mid Summer?

  • @diego_villena
    @diego_villena 5 месяцев назад

    Do you have a similar video for citrus?

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  5 месяцев назад

      Yes: ruclips.net/video/knY009Esk6Y/видео.htmlsi=n59L84F6aOIziOq0

  • @TruckTaxiMoveIt
    @TruckTaxiMoveIt 2 года назад

    Thanks

  • @skLuke638
    @skLuke638 Год назад

    I bought a Persimmon tree from a nursery in a neighboring city. This was PRE-RUclips. After a few years of it not bearing fruit I returned to the nursery only to find it OUT OF BUSINESS. Go figure!
    Since then we have planted a couple of other different native persimmons hoping to pollinate the other.
    This first tree had grown really big & I am attempting to talk my husband into cut it down or pruning it down completely. We are both in it 70s & I'm not able to work in the yard(car accident 2yo). Any suggestions?
    We live in NE Georgia

  • @im11000
    @im11000 2 года назад

    Thank you for sharing this video I put a persimmons youn tree in ground 3 years ago last year had few fruits on it they all dropped the size is a small cherry any idea why they dropped!

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад +1

      The tree is likely too young to carry them to maturity. This is normal. Grafted trees think they are the age of the tree the scion wood came from despite being very young, so they tend to overfruit when too young. Alternatively, it also could have been underwatered and went through drought stress.

    • @im11000
      @im11000 2 года назад

      @@TheMillennialGardener
      In north jersey summer how many times a week should I water it

  • @estelajrey1319
    @estelajrey1319 2 года назад

    Do you have a video when it has flourished?

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад

      You can watch this here: ruclips.net/video/2fk1UFWKZME/видео.html

  • @ooohlaa13
    @ooohlaa13 2 года назад

    I have the slightly flattened apple shape non astringent persimmon. Does it also fruit on previous years new growth? Not quite sure what you mean by that. Also how to recognize water sprouts, are they the ones that grow straight up. Florida storm winds often blow off the fruit but this weeks hurricane spared my 6 large persimmons, just had one mildly sweet one with pudding texture. Wonderful. Thanx v well done video.

    • @yellowdog762jb
      @yellowdog762jb 2 года назад

      FYI, it's probably a Matsumoto Wase Fuyu. Almost worth growing just because the name is so fun to say!

    • @ooohlaa13
      @ooohlaa13 2 года назад

      @@yellowdog762jb yes I believe so but still need to know how to recognize what are water sprouts and where does it fruit so I can prune shortly. I am not entertained by the name after living in Hawaii for 15 years, Asian words are very familiar but I get your humor for Westerners!

    • @yellowdog762jb
      @yellowdog762jb 2 года назад

      @@ooohlaa13 Water sprouts almost always go straight up and they are long and thin compared to the rest of the growth on the tree. I'm assuming that your persimmon fruits like mine. If so, it will fruit off of spurs on wood that grew last year. If you look closely at the branches you will see a difference in the color of the bark between last year's wood and older wood. If you can, try to leave some new growth when you prune. Life got in the way last year and I didn't prune last winter. I need to take my tree height down by about 4 feet so I can reach fruit to pick it. I have a few branches that are also too low now from the weight of the fruit pulling it down. If I prune it as hard as I should, 2023 won't be a good persimmon year for me. Thos past year my individual fruit size was only about 60% as large as it was the year before because the tree over produced lots of small fruit. To add insult to injury we had a long dry spell, and even with irrigation the tree dropped lots of fruit. So I got a low number of small fruits this fall. I learned my lesson on the watering and the pruning.

    • @ooohlaa13
      @ooohlaa13 2 года назад +1

      @@yellowdog762jb excellent thorough info thanx so much ... Florida hurricanes and high winds often blow off my young fruit when golf ball size. I usually have only about 15 going into ripening and then lose some again. It is a small tree but not that young, about 12 years? I get lots of blossoms but they don't tie up that well into fruit for some reason. This year I got only 7 but they were lush and large and very sweet. I let them get very soft before eating. I am in competition here in NC Florida with the squirrels, rodents and insects as well. Thanx again

    • @yellowdog762jb
      @yellowdog762jb 2 года назад +1

      @@ooohlaa13 My pleasure! We have squirrels in the area, but we also have some rescue cats that were once feral. We trapped them, had them vetted/spayed, and eventually tamed them. We keep them in at night, but they have a cat door they can use to go out during the day. They are pretty good at keeping squirrels out of our yard most of the time. Our major fruit enemies are mocking birds and stink bugs. We're on the Texas Gulf Coast, but we don't get as many storms as you guys do. The occasional hard freeze that we get every 3 to 5 years plays havoc with our citrus though. I lost a 15 ft Moro Blood Orange 2 years ago that I really miss.

  • @scottl7604
    @scottl7604 2 года назад +4

    A white sheet hung on the fence would have been ideal.

  • @verdantpulse5185
    @verdantpulse5185 2 года назад +3

    That fork between the two leaders at crotch high is too tight. there is included bark, the tree will split. The first cut should have been to remove the leader on the right (has another tight fork higher up).

  • @edisonpereira2151
    @edisonpereira2151 2 года назад

    Great video, thank you!!! I need to move my chocolate persimmon tree, any tips? The tree was planted last year, it's about 1 to 2 years old. Thank you.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад +1

      If you *must* move the tree, you'll want to wait until it is at peak dormancy, but the ground is still workable. Don't move it until it is fully dormant, because it will be a lot less stressful on the tree. Once it buds out in spring, it's too late, so you must get it moved while it's sound asleep and the ground can be dug. If your ground doesn't freeze, mid-to-late January is best.

    • @edisonpereira2151
      @edisonpereira2151 2 года назад

      @@TheMillennialGardener Thank you very much!

  • @annieli7299
    @annieli7299 Год назад

    Is it need to prune back to the eye level every winter? Thank you.

  • @mayan3678
    @mayan3678 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for video!! I actually thought you had to grow them tall, as branches hang low, with weight of fruit.

  • @MKokoy
    @MKokoy 2 года назад

    Thanks for your video, I have a question, when and which month in the year is better to move and relocate a fig tree from a location to another, the tree is about 10 feet tall and has 5 branches from the root( it's kind of large tree)?

    • @mrlloydum
      @mrlloydum 2 года назад

      Winter, after all leaves fall off, typically in January for Northern Hemisphere

  • @ilg212
    @ilg212 7 месяцев назад

    Do you summer prune persimmons too? If so can you please do a video?

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  7 месяцев назад

      I have one here on my second channel: ruclips.net/video/9qVU3NYAMNs/видео.htmlsi=9cgbh31HlD7t77fg

  • @bluefish7809
    @bluefish7809 9 месяцев назад

    This is open center pruning sytle isnt it?

  • @mamomin55
    @mamomin55 2 года назад

    I have 25 feet persimmon tree, it About 5 years old but we never had fruit, so please advise my what to do,

    • @MrGohphilip
      @MrGohphilip 2 года назад

      Lightly chop the trunk with a knife to tell him that if he doesn’t fruit you are going to cut it down.

  • @calebdennis4167
    @calebdennis4167 2 года назад

    What do you do with all the cuttings?

  • @williamjones1797
    @williamjones1797 Год назад

    Excellent tutorial but I'm a little surprised you left all three of the lowest branches on. Seems like their fruit will be shaded- therefore small or not ripening adequately. And wouldn't you be wanting to "push" growth to higher branches with better sun exposure?.

  • @leeandbarbbelle9795
    @leeandbarbbelle9795 2 года назад

    Do you use tree wound paint on cut limbs?

  • @one4sorrow
    @one4sorrow 2 года назад

    Thanks for the video. Do you expect your persimmon to crop this season? I'm struggling with pruning my potted Jiro Persimmon; I don't want to cut off all the new growth since they only fruit on new wood ... I suspect I'm going to be forced to give it a hard prune as it is unbalanced with a tall central leader and a scaffold branch that is severely drooping on one side 😩

    • @yellowdog762jb
      @yellowdog762jb 2 года назад

      Speaking from personal experience, it's better to get it right now, than to finally decide to do it in a couple of years. Persimmons grow fast so do what needs to be done now and you'll have lots more fruit two years from now, and in years to come, than you would otherwise. I'm having those kinds of regrets now. Last summer I moved a nectarine that I should have moved the year before, and I'm still kicking myself for waiting. I'd be expecting fruit this year if I had moved it when I first realized that I should.

  • @jennybaez-cepeda4919
    @jennybaez-cepeda4919 2 года назад +1

    I was wondering about fruiting. Because my persimmon tree has been in the ground for three years and still no fruit. I finally decided to move it to another part of the yard away it’s going to get more sun. But the funny thing is I looked online everywhere it can show me the fruit branching. I got nada !

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад +4

      From my research, it usually takes 3-4 years for a grafted persimmon to fruit. Remember, the first year you plant it, it isn't really a full year. It's really just half a season, so that 3rd season is really its second full year in-ground. As long as you give it 6+ hours of direct, unfiltered sun each day, and enough food and water, it will fruit when it's ready. Of course, I'm assuming it's grafted. Seed-grown persimmon trees can take 10+ years to fruit.

    • @jennybaez-cepeda4919
      @jennybaez-cepeda4919 2 года назад +1

      @@TheMillennialGardener thank you very much for your reply that’s the reason why I moved it. Extra belly rubs from me to your big putty. 🤣😂🤣

  • @MommaFig1
    @MommaFig1 2 года назад +4

    Next time, consider a sheet on the fence. Hard to see the branches

    • @MangoCitizen
      @MangoCitizen Месяц назад

      Better colour the branches

    • @gold-blooded
      @gold-blooded 14 дней назад

      Wow be grateful he’s making the video. It’s not like you paid for a service.

  • @philiprandazzo39
    @philiprandazzo39 2 года назад +1

    Why do persimmons drop some or all of the fruit.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад

      That could happen for many reasons. The most common reasons are:
      1. The tree isn't mature enough to carry fruit yet.
      2. The tree is undergoing drought stress and dropping its fruit as a result.
      3. The variety requires cross-pollination. Some Asian persimmons and most American persimmons require cross-pollination.

    • @artsnow8872
      @artsnow8872 2 года назад +1

      Fruit-drop is common to persimmons. Some varieties drop more than others. My tree drops about 20-30 fruit during the summer and fall. I picked about 100 persimmons last year and this year from an 8 foot tall Asian tree, in late October (Maryland, USA).

    • @MrGohphilip
      @MrGohphilip 2 года назад

      It is called self thinning. If you water it enough it will not drop too many!

    • @ooohlaa13
      @ooohlaa13 2 года назад

      @@artsnow8872 do you wait until they are a bit soft before harvest? I like to but sometimes rodents or insects get them and my tree rarely produces more than 10 survivors from Florida hurricane winds.

  • @domlamwaitung
    @domlamwaitung Год назад

    0:00 0:00

  • @ameramar1010
    @ameramar1010 2 года назад +1

    لااله الاالله محمد رسول الله

  • @haubui5481
    @haubui5481 2 года назад

    What is your tree looks like now?

  • @SCRT
    @SCRT 2 года назад +13

    Fun fact: You’re reading this comment before your even watched half the video 😂

    • @mailasun
      @mailasun Год назад

      False. I finished the whole thing

    • @Own7000
      @Own7000 11 месяцев назад

      You must not be very smart. Stick to being quiet.

  • @irenelester1348
    @irenelester1348 2 года назад +2

    Need to have a better back ground. Hard to see the cutting that you're making. The fence looks like the tree.

  • @kingjames4886
    @kingjames4886 2 года назад

    I'd have thought it would be less stressful for the tree when it's actively growing and can heal over the open wounds faster so disease doesn't take over.

    • @TheMillennialGardener
      @TheMillennialGardener  2 года назад

      Deciduous trees are best pruned when they’re dormant. Think of it like having surgery when you’re under anesthesia and unconscious versus surgery when you’re wide awake. Pruning a tree when it is out of dormancy would be like having an amputation when you’re wide awake. Not fun! 😮

    • @kingjames4886
      @kingjames4886 2 года назад

      @@TheMillennialGardener heh, not sure that analogy is quite the same. :P
      though I guess it does kinda make sense to trim things before the tree tries to put growth hormones into buds you'd otherwise trim.
      I've just been getting into growing trees relatively recently TBH and there seems to be a lot of conflicting opinions and hearsay involved.

    • @ooohlaa13
      @ooohlaa13 2 года назад

      @@TheMillennialGardener eeks great example! owie!

  • @AJ-bf6hw
    @AJ-bf6hw 2 месяца назад

    Good info but too long...

  • @raylotfi1318
    @raylotfi1318 2 дня назад

    Not acceptable tree doesn't look nice and next few years you reduced fruits

  • @sportsonwheelss
    @sportsonwheelss Год назад

    Seriously, Japanese saw and he pull out a Japanese carpenter saw for lumber work? Hello! it is a tree with green wood.

  • @getupgrow9902
    @getupgrow9902 2 года назад +1

    Great informative video 👍