24” stove pipe 12” off the ground around the trunk. Bunch of examples in the fruit tree section around apple trees. I suppose that won’t work well when there are trees around for them to climb on but I don’t have my trees in that setting.How do you critter proof a tree? Every animal in the woods seems to eat persimmons. Coons, opossums, skunks, and I've even seen squirrels eating persimmons. That must be some critter proofing.
Picked a fuyu today. Very flavorful, sweet, and about half way between firm and soft. That said it was quite firmly attached, and as the picture shows the connecting stalk is relatively thick on the fuyus. I wont say that they can't / won't fall but I haven't seen one ever hit the ground in my yard and my trees are inside a fenced yard that keep hogs, deer, bears and other large mammals out. Then again, as a large mammal myself I can't say I've given them too much a chance to fall.
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24” stove pipe 12” off the ground around the trunk. Bunch of examples in the fruit tree section around apple trees. I suppose that won’t work well when there are trees around for them to climb on but I don’t have my trees in that setting.
Yep. Earliest ripening here is in September, though majority of our fuyus ripen in October. We get occasional morning frosts when cold fronts push far enough down, typically between Thanksgiving and early March. Whereas South Florida accumulates very few fruting "chill hours", in North Florida we average about 500 to 600 chill hours. Bulk of leaves haven't started falling yet but are beginning to change color.Do leaves even drop in your part of Florida?
All this habitat work and you’ve never heard of a baffle or a squirrel baffle? The stove pipe at 36” will stop most critters provided there isn’t a nearby tree or branch they can leap off. Can a squirrel jump 36” inches? Sure but not past a baffle. There just isn’t anything to hang on to. Not sure what your ideal of a few is but I’ll have about 70 trees when all said and done. A few more bucks and a little more time for an already expensive endeavor doesn’t seem to be a deal breaker for me.I've watch coons untangle all kinds of problems when they really want to get at food. That would be a no brainer for squirrels. However, if you are not having issues, it must be working in your situation.
One more thing here that always applies is our objectives. For me attraction to a specific spot is secondary. My purpose for persimmons and other soft mast is to feed deer. So for me, that means significant quantity. That means trying to protect individual trees over the long haul is time and cost prohibitive.
I could certainly see someone that wanted to plant a few trees for attraction and would go to lengths to protect them might try Lotus or Kaki. That is similar to what I'm doing with NG. For my American persimmons, I don't do any protection. Deer don't seem to bother my native trees. However, deer are curious. I try to graft them high enough that the scions our out of reach of deer. That is my longer term plan for the NG. I'm just waiting for a few native seedling to get large enough for bark grafting.
Thanks,
Jack