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Transplanting Persimmon

Teeder

5 year old buck +
I have 1/2 dozen persimmons that I planted last year and now would like to move to a different spot. They're only about 1'-2' tall. Any issues with moving them?
 
I'll be curious to hear what others with more experience think, but my observations with persimmons is that they tend to be pretty tough plants. With that said, they also have a fairly prominent tap root, which might make them difficult to transplant without injuring.

I take it most of these were bare root seedlings when they were planted last year? I put some from MDC in a gravel bed to baby them and transplant them later. I would say they doubled in root size (compared to the above ground growth) in a growing season and I ended up snapping off that tap root. Depending on the growing conditions, they may have a similar size root mass as to when they planted. For what it's worth, I think the majority still did fine after transplanting from the gravel bed.
 
You will probably be okay since it has only been one year, and the plants are so small. However, as Hoytv pointed out above, the tap roots are a problem on larger trees. If you can move the dirtball around them rather than just taking them out of the ground, it will make success more likely.
 
They were bare root and I will dig up as much rootball as I can lift.
Thanks!
 
I'll be picking up my order of 18 - 24" tall Persimmon seedlings fairly soon. I'll have some left over to pot and then use as fill ins this fall where any of the others died. Which of these would you recommend?
1. Using a typical three gallon pot like ones commonly used for apple trees
2. Using a deep pot like is commonly used for oak tree seedlings
3. Just plant them a few inches apart in my loaming sand near my garden hose and dig them up this fall
4. Do something else that I haven't listed above
 
I'll be picking up my order of 18 - 24" tall Persimmon seedlings fairly soon. I'll have some left over to pot and then use as fill ins this fall where any of the others died. Which of these would you recommend?
1. Using a typical three gallon pot like ones commonly used for apple trees
2. Using a deep pot like is commonly used for oak tree seedlings
3. Just plant them a few inches apart in my loaming sand near my garden hose and dig them up this fall
4. Do something else that I haven't listed above

I have seen really.impressive results with a sand bed. You have to water rather often, but the root growth looks amazing.
 
I built a Missouri Gravel Bed on our home farm and at my home. Both were constructed with play or creek sand and are incredible for temporarily holding trees. With that said, the persimmons actually grow too well and send too deep of a tap root in even just a single growing season.
 
I built a Missouri Gravel Bed on our home farm and at my home. Both were constructed with play or creek sand and are incredible for temporarily holding trees. With that said, the persimmons actually grow too well and send too deep of a tap root in even just a single growing season.

Have you made a post about that? I'm thinking about making one for ROD.
 
Since it sounds like the taproot is the concerns, I think I will use Walmart reusable shopping tote bags. I've used them to grow oak seedlings during their second summer in the past. They are breathable and so the roots got air pruned. I stapled them with two rows of staples every couple inches to create three vertical compartments, extending from the bottom surface to the open end by the handle. My recollect is that gave me three compartments about 4+" diameter by 15" deep. I didn't get any root crossover from one compartment to another, because of the air pruning at the rows of staples. A minor downside was that they didn't stand up on their own, so I had to sandwich them between two fabric pots I was growing fruit trees in. An upside was that they have handles. To get the trees back out of the bags at the planting site, I popped the lines of staples.
 
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