Persimmon

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Daluke
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Persimmon

Post by Daluke »

My Italian grandparents in law have been kind enough to leave 50+ persimmon seeds which I have sown.

According to them they are “Royal” persimmon.

Has anyone heard of such a type? Or, anything sounding similar (they have thick Sicilian accents).
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Re: Persimmon

Post by shibui »

I think there is mention of Princess persimmon on US Bonsai nut forum. Looks like it is a different species from the fruiting one - Diospyros rhombifolia.
I was surprised when you mention seeds because the fruiting persimmon rarely has seeds. There are a number of species and obviously some do set seed.
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Re: Persimmon

Post by TimS »

I can't say i've seen princess persimmon in Australia, but maybe i've not been looking hard enough.
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Re: Persimmon

Post by Daluke »

Could be princess (they are royal no?)
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Re: Persimmon

Post by TimS »

If anyone knows of princess persimmon available let me know, i'd love to try growing them
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Re: Persimmon

Post by PeachSlices »

TimS wrote: June 24th, 2020, 7:22 pm If anyone knows of princess persimmon available let me know, i'd love to try growing them
Yes they are available. To get them to fruit is another story.

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Re: Persimmon

Post by TimS »

PeachSlices wrote: June 24th, 2020, 7:34 pm
TimS wrote: June 24th, 2020, 7:22 pm If anyone knows of princess persimmon available let me know, i'd love to try growing them
Yes they are available. To get them to fruit is another story.

Simon
I will try to hunt some down and look into it further
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Re: Persimmon

Post by KIRKY »

I think you need both male and female plants. They take a long time to fruit from seed. They are also difficult to propagate from seed.
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Re: Persimmon

Post by PeachSlices »

TimS wrote: June 24th, 2020, 7:52 pm
PeachSlices wrote: June 24th, 2020, 7:34 pm
TimS wrote: June 24th, 2020, 7:22 pm If anyone knows of princess persimmon available let me know, i'd love to try growing them
Yes they are available. To get them to fruit is another story.

Simon
I will try to hunt some down and look into it further
Can pick you up one and send it down if your unlucky but will be a small plant. i've seen them bear fruit on a 10cm pencil cutting.

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Re: Persimmon

Post by melbrackstone »

There's some useful information here on getting the persimmon to fruit....using the Chinese tree...Diospyros armata.

I use Chrome's auto translate to help me read it.
https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/y5OZN9uTCzSC ... BbWxHByyLI
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Re: Persimmon

Post by MikeK »

TimS wrote: June 24th, 2020, 7:52 pm
PeachSlices wrote: June 24th, 2020, 7:34 pm
TimS wrote: June 24th, 2020, 7:22 pm If anyone knows of princess persimmon available let me know, i'd love to try growing them
Yes they are available. To get them to fruit is another story.

Simon
I will try to hunt some down and look into it further
Not sure if it helps as he's in Sydney, but I have a vague recollection of seeing 'Princess Persimmon' starters at Ray Nesci's nursery. Maybe give him a call ...
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Re: Persimmon

Post by treeman »

Diospyros kaki is the one we eat and the wild form, which is about half the size of the eating type, is what they use for bonsai in Japan. It is called Diospyrros kaki var sylvestris. Diospyros rhomifolia is the Princess persimmon from China with small fruit and is also very popular for bonsai. It has small leaves and ramifies pretty well compared to D kaki. I have some from seed (and later from cuttings of the seedlings) but until they flower I won't know which are males and which are females. When I do I will be able to multiply them in earnest. You will need one of each to get fruit. Daluke, your seeds are most likely D kaki.
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Re: Persimmon

Post by yumcha1 »

Ray Nesci (Sydney) definitely had/has them, both male and female plants. I bought this one from his nursery about 3 years ago (and was just a straight stick), and it fruits without the need for a male, and therefore no seeds. The fruit remains on the tree for a long time and even into winter.
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Re: Persimmon

Post by Daluke »

Thanks.

These seem under rated - I haven’t seen any exhibited in Australia.
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Re: Persimmon

Post by melbrackstone »

I look forward to seeing some exhibited in Aus one day too. I'm currently growing about 6 different Diospyros varieties, 3 of which are native to Australia. Some I'm growing to see if I can get some fruit - D. kaki for a start...since I love eating them, but they're rarely available at the fruit shops here...
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