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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Quality Deer Management
Chickasaw Plum Trees
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<blockquote data-quote="Ski" data-source="post: 5922908" data-attributes="member: 20583"><p>Plums are easy. I start lots of them from cuttings and transplanting suckers. Most survive long enough to be eaten to the root lol. But once the root is established they just keep spreading and suckering. Wildlife of all sorts love them. </p><p></p><p>They need pollinators to fruit. Cuttings or suckers will grow but if from same tree none will produce fruit until there's a pollinator. Since you've got fruit producing trees already, I'd take cuttings and suckers from all of them. Then let nature do its thing. Sunlight is key. They'll be a thicket quicker than an apple tree can begin producing fruit.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ski, post: 5922908, member: 20583"] Plums are easy. I start lots of them from cuttings and transplanting suckers. Most survive long enough to be eaten to the root lol. But once the root is established they just keep spreading and suckering. Wildlife of all sorts love them. They need pollinators to fruit. Cuttings or suckers will grow but if from same tree none will produce fruit until there's a pollinator. Since you've got fruit producing trees already, I'd take cuttings and suckers from all of them. Then let nature do its thing. Sunlight is key. They'll be a thicket quicker than an apple tree can begin producing fruit. [/QUOTE]
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