I’ve been watching for months how to prune trees and no body explains it like you. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. Lord willing I plan on planting trees in the raised bed and keep them small I’ll keep learning until then😂❤
Tom I love your vids and have been watching them for a while now. I'm a transplant from California that now lives in the Pacific Northwest and would love to hear ANY recommendations that you can make for this kind of climate. Thanks for sharing your knowledge!
I always look forward to your vids, only they are too few and far between. I want to plant everything you show but here in Maine (zone 5/4)I am limited. I am especially interested in those pomegranates, actually everything you showed. What of what you showed is possible to grow in Maine? Thanks.
For those trying to grow figs in extreme winter conditions with many days below freezing winter protection is key. Keeping the tree to a manageable size and creating an insulating area to protect the tree.
When you were talking about the Hachiya Persimmon and if you want to pick it early, I was saying to myself.... say freeze it, freeze it and you nailed it. Not too many people know that little trick!
Nice, I would have liked some explanation in the first segment of exactly why rogue bloom is a fireblight hazard. What is the mechanism of this threat of disease spread? Improved audio quality! Tom, time to upgrade the camera, even my cellphone does high definition, 360p is frustrating, would love to see your beautiful fruits and what you are doing in greater detail with 720p, 1080i, or at least 480p! we are feasting right now on our Izu persimmons, Kelly even made a batch of sorbet - YUM!
If you go to our website and click on the "The Home Fruit Tree Grower", you will see right above Tom's picture is our recommended selections for zones 5 to 9.
the best apples are Ranet Semerenko, these are apples that you will not know the taste of real apples without trying. Alas, these apples are not available in America. in the market in Poland and Ukraine, these apples are about 2 times more expensive than any other varieties
If you go to our website and click on the "The Home Fruit Tree Grower", you will see right above Tom's picture is our recommended selections for the Northwest.
There are lots of tricks, like reflective tape and such, none work very well. It gets better after the tree is older and produces more fruit. Don’t remove bird pecked fruit from your tree, or they’ll just peck another. Jays used to decimate my Pluot, then it got more productive and the fruit they ate didn’t matter much. Cherries and other early ripening varieties can be hardest hit by birds, more fruit seems the only answer.
Tri Nguyen persimmons are very popular. www.davewilson.com/home-gardens/where-to-buy/retail-sources/Fuyu%20%28Jiro%29%20Persimmon/FUYJI/product-information/product/fuyu-jiro-persimmon/Yes//
All in one Fuyu is the most popular crunchy eating variety. Chocolate and Coffeecake are both excellent also, but best planted together for better pollination.
Lang is partly self-fruitful. You will get bigger crops with pollination. You might try mail order for a different variety. www.davewilson.com/home-gardens/where-to-buy/retail-nurseries-mail-order
Hi tom I have been trying to grow persimmon from last 4 yrs. Till now i have tried 4 bare rooted trees( jiro and fuyu varities) one every year. But all of them died. They were all planted on different locations. Issue is my first persimmon i planted showed only 2 inch of growth after it broke dormancy. This continued for 2 yrs and in 3rd year it died. And other 3 i planted last yr never broke dormancy till mid summer but were alive as bark was green underneath. But they also now dead as we heading for winter in sydney AUSTRALIA. I planted them in ful sun with 11 hrs or direct sunlight in summer. We do have temps for 40+ in summer. What i might be doing wrong. All stone fruits , citrus and apples are doing great..except persimmon (and cherry) I m very keen in growing this again. Any tips would be helpful Do u think i shall plant it in PART SHADE? PLEASE HELP Thanks sandy
My first guess would be over watering. If you're watering them more than once a week they will not thrive. You should be watering about every 10 to 14 days in the summer, letting the first few inches of topsoil dry between irrigations.
I’ve been watching for months how to prune trees and no body explains it like you. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. Lord willing I plan on planting trees in the raised bed and keep them small I’ll keep learning until then😂❤
Great job and information on persimmons, Tom!
You are one lucky man,eating persimmon all day 😁😁💚💚💚
I love persimmon, I grafted round and Hachiya persimmons to my regular Fuyu persimmon. Both started have fruits. I love your UA-cam as well Tom!
Tom says thank you!
Tom I love your vids and have been watching them for a while now. I'm a transplant from California that now lives in the Pacific Northwest and would love to hear ANY recommendations that you can make for this kind of climate. Thanks for sharing your knowledge!
I always look forward to your vids, only they are too few and far between. I want to plant everything you show but here in Maine (zone 5/4)I am limited. I am especially interested in those pomegranates, actually everything you showed. What of what you showed is possible to grow in Maine? Thanks.
For those trying to grow figs in extreme winter conditions with many days below freezing winter protection is key. Keeping the tree to a manageable size and creating an insulating area to protect the tree.
I love your videos and your fruits selection, to bad we can't order directly from you for our home garden. I've seen so many fruit trees that wanted.
When you were talking about the Hachiya Persimmon and if you want to pick it early, I was saying to myself.... say freeze it, freeze it and you nailed it.
Not too many people know that little trick!
HI TOM
THANK YOU FOR THE INF VERY HELPFUL ❤️❤️❤️
Fireblight can be transmitted by bee activity.. It spreads easier in warm weather also.
Nice, I would have liked some explanation in the first segment of exactly why rogue bloom is a fireblight hazard. What is the mechanism of this threat of disease spread? Improved audio quality! Tom, time to upgrade the camera, even my cellphone does high definition, 360p is frustrating, would love to see your beautiful fruits and what you are doing in greater detail with 720p, 1080i, or at least 480p! we are feasting right now on our Izu persimmons, Kelly even made a batch of sorbet - YUM!
Enjoyable video! Great info. Looking forward to the next video!
great video as usual Tom!
What exactly is "Winter Protection?" Thanks. Always look forward to your vids.
very clear about pollination
Thank you
this got me so hype. can't wait to buy some of these trees.
With coffee cake persimmon, if you have one that's non-pollinated fruit, does the astringency remain even if you let it ripen to wrinkled state?
I believe so, if you freeze and then thaw them they will lose astringency also.
Very nice video! Thank you. Can a persimmon tree be grown as a compact 6' tree you demonstrated in other videos? How to prune them? Thank you!
Look for signs of physical stress.. too much water, heat or nitrogen. A think layer of mulch will help prevent many stress issues.
How well will Jujubees do near the coast in southern CA?
What rootstock is it on? Some dwarfing apple roots need staking.
Why are the persimmon trees so tall u didn't prune them eye level?
great videos Tom, i hope to plant some trees soon
Wow never heard of Jujubes
Looks so yummy though
Parfianka is awesome!
If you go to our website and click on the "The Home Fruit Tree Grower", you will see right above Tom's picture is our recommended selections for zones 5 to 9.
They do fine as long as you plant them in the hottest, driest part of you yard. A full sun area with good drainage.
Jujubes should work down to about five degrees or close to zero when established.
the best apples are Ranet Semerenko, these are apples that you will not know the taste of real apples without trying. Alas, these apples are not available in America. in the market in Poland and Ukraine, these apples are about 2 times more expensive than any other varieties
Hey Dave, what trees do you recommend for the Pacific Northwest, and West Coast British Columbia?
I would suspect that disease transmission is via pollen, be it in the air, or on a pollenating bug?
If you go to our website and click on the "The Home Fruit Tree Grower", you will see right above Tom's picture is our recommended selections for the Northwest.
I have been research why my fuyu persimmon tree lose its fruits batch by batch from June to Sept? I really need some good tips on this! Thanks!
How do you keep the birds eating the fruits???
There are lots of tricks, like reflective tape and such, none work very well. It gets better after the tree is older and produces more fruit. Don’t remove bird pecked fruit from your tree, or they’ll just peck another. Jays used to decimate my Pluot, then it got more productive and the fruit they ate didn’t matter much. Cherries and other early ripening varieties can be hardest hit by birds, more fruit seems the only answer.
I looking to buy Jiro persimmon tree for awhile but no one have it in stock....😪
Tri Nguyen persimmons are very popular. www.davewilson.com/home-gardens/where-to-buy/retail-sources/Fuyu%20%28Jiro%29%20Persimmon/FUYJI/product-information/product/fuyu-jiro-persimmon/Yes//
Which veriety of persimmon is most sweetest and crunchy ?
All in one Fuyu is the most popular crunchy eating variety. Chocolate and Coffeecake are both excellent also, but best planted together for better pollination.
CAN YOU PLEASE POST ANY TRIMMING TIPS ON LEE JUJUBE TREE.DO I KEEP TREE SHORT OR TALL.
In my area all i can find to buy is LANG JUJUBE so that means the tree wont bear fruit? if i cant find a LI?
Lang is partly self-fruitful. You will get bigger crops with pollination. You might try mail order for a different variety. www.davewilson.com/home-gardens/where-to-buy/retail-nurseries-mail-order
thank you for your knowledge
How cold tolerant are jujubes? Albuquerque?
Hi tom
I have been trying to grow persimmon from last 4 yrs. Till now i have tried 4 bare rooted trees( jiro and fuyu varities) one every year. But all of them died.
They were all planted on different locations.
Issue is my first persimmon i planted showed only 2 inch of growth after it broke dormancy. This continued for 2 yrs and in 3rd year it died. And other 3 i planted last yr never broke dormancy till mid summer but were alive as bark was green underneath. But they also now dead as we heading for winter in sydney AUSTRALIA.
I planted them in ful sun with 11 hrs or direct sunlight in summer. We do have temps for 40+ in summer.
What i might be doing wrong. All stone fruits , citrus and apples are doing great..except persimmon (and cherry)
I m very keen in growing this again. Any tips would be helpful
Do u think i shall plant it in PART SHADE?
PLEASE HELP
Thanks sandy
My first guess would be over watering. If you're watering them more than once a week they will not thrive. You should be watering about every 10 to 14 days in the summer, letting the first few inches of topsoil dry between irrigations.
Hi, I was wondering Dave Wilson Nursery you sale plants or fruits too?
Just wholesale trees. Fruit, nut and shade. Plus some berries.
put in more blooper clips gang lol
That is correct.
i work in produce and i always throw away alot of tiger figs. such a waste
Jiro Fuyu.
great, thank you!
Yummy!!!
I mean Tom. Whoops.
Didn't your mom ever tell you to not talk with food in your mouth?
AAA+++