The Fishman
5 year old buck +
I bought a Deer Candy persimmon from Chestnut Hill Outdoors back in May. The central leader was intentionally cut. I really wasn't that worried about it since I bought the tree for $4.50 on clearance. I saw another Chestnut Hill persimmon tree that also had the central leader cut at another Wal Mart and thought it was odd. Over the summer, I emailed Chestnut Hill about cutting the central leader asking why they would do that. They responded "The only Grafted American Persimmons I recall getting pruned were the Morris Burton's and it was because they grew too tall for the pallets. The trees are stacked on the pallets. Morris Burton is a fast and vigorous grower and Deer Magnet is a slow grower, always last to leaf out after dormancy. It should still grow fine and produce as well." I saw a video from Chestnut Hill today and the persimmon in the video (see photo below) also had the central leader cut. So does anyone know why you would intentionally cut the central leader of a persimmon or any tree? The tree is doing fine. I will plant it in its permanent home in a couple of months and I am training another branch to become the central leader. It seems to be a common practice for Chestnut Hill, so I am just curious as to why they, and perhaps others, prune the central leader.