Mine have had no care since they were planted and protected with tree tubes.9 years in and started getting nuts their 6th year. I have been fertilizing them with fruit tree spikes the last 4 years.
Without care (fertilizing and pruning) apples and pears will take much longer and will likely have poor production. Chestnuts and Persimmons need no care to produce well. The best "bang for the buck" with trees for me has been bark grafting native American persimmons when they are about 1" in diameter. Success rates are high and they often produce the first persimmons in the 2nd leaf. It only takes a few years more for the production to become significant.That’s looking awesome man. It seems like, from limited personal experience, that chestnuts and persimmons are an 8-10 year investment before they produce, oaks 10-15+, apples 4–6, and pears never produce anything significant (or at least for 7 years).
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Very cool and very heavy crop for a tree that size!View attachment 28499Update same tree sagging to within 18” of the ground. I didn’t realize how supple the limbs are. My apple and pear trees are all sagging also.
What a great problem to have!I am starting to fear the branches may break should I prop the up?View attachment 28570
This is also our first heavy crop of nuts last year the nuts were much smaller.This is probably the first year we have had significant volume of nuts. I was at the farm the other day and the ground under the trees is littered with nuts and there are still plenty on the trees. I don't think our deer have figured them just yet, but I'm sure they will soon. It took me about 2 minutes to collect 36 nuts yesterday. Most were still inside the spiny husks which is what took so long. Perhaps the deer are waiting for the husks to open more for easier access. I'd say about 10% of the casing were brown and fully opened and 90% were still green and just open enough you could pull out the nuts with your fingers.
I don't know if I'll have time next year, but I went ahead and put them in the crisper. If I have time, I may direct seed some of them.
I'd say that most of the nuts I picked up were about the size of the nuts in the picture.This is also our first heavy crop of nuts last year the nuts were much smaller.