Saturday, January 7, 2017

Re: [nafex] Szukis persimmon

Steve,

I have two Szukis plants in NM at 7000 elevation. I got them from the
late John Gordon (am I remembering the name right) of western NY as
shoots on their own roots from a tree that he had.

I had communicated with him about losing the tops of the grafted
persimmons I kept trying to plant here. He had told me at first that you
couldn't get named varieties on their own roots because they were too
hard to make cuttings of but then he was able to get some rooted shoots.

In this region the tops often died during their early years but now two
of the original three have established themselves and at least some of
the top survives. They are about 3 or 4 feet tall after at least 12-15
years.

I also have another persimmon that grew up from the roots of an earlier
grafted plant. Don't know if it is male or female. It's probably close
to 20 years old and is about 6 feet high. I've never noticed flowers on
it, nor on the two younger plants.

Regards,

Jay

Jay Cutts
Director, Cutts Graduate Reviews
Lead Author, Barron's MCAT Prep Book
Lead Author, Barron's MCAT Flash Cards
Lead Author, Barron's LSAT Prep Book
(505)-281-0684
10 am to 10 pm Mt Time, 7 days

On 1/7/2017 12:01 PM, sc wrote:
> Hello,
> Is anyone growing the 'Szukis' variety of persimmon -- in a location where there are nearly certainly no (northern strain) wild populations of persimmon around?
> Thank you,Steve (NJ)
> __________________
> nafex mailing list
> nafex@lists.ibiblio.org
> Northamerican Allied Fruit Experimenters
> subscribe/unsubscribe|user config|list info:
> http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/nafex

__________________
nafex mailing list
nafex@lists.ibiblio.org
Northamerican Allied Fruit Experimenters
subscribe/unsubscribe|user config|list info:
http://lists.ibiblio.org/mailman/listinfo/nafex

No comments:

Post a Comment