To Buy, Call:

1-800-913-9347

You are here: Welcome to Aaron's Nursery. Buy Berry Plants, Flowering Trees, Grape Vines, Fruit Trees, Shade Trees, Palm Trees, Wildlife TreesFruit TreesPersimmon Trees → Wildlife American Persimmon Tree

Wildlife American Persimmon Tree


After a frost in November the Wildlife American Persimmon tree begins to lose its leaves revealing the bright orange persimmon fruit for birds, deer, squirrels, and other wildlife animals.


The American Persimmon tree grows in great abundance throughout most of the United States being a great food source for hungry wildlife animals during the winter.


Call 1-800-913-9347 or buy online now:

Add to cart

 

Wildlife American Persimmon Tree price(s):

1-2 feet tall (Fall Shipment)

$12.95

2-3 feet tall (Fall Shipment)

$19.80

4-5 feet tall (Fall Shipment)

$42.90

5-6 feet tall (Fall Shipment)

$52.80

6-7 feet tall (Fall Shipment)

$62.40

8-9 feet tall (Fall Shipment)

$78.60

8-9 feet tall (Fall Shipment)

$139.50

9-10 feet tall (Fall Shipment)

$176.80

9-10 feet tall (Containerized)

$276.80





Recommended zones for Wildlife American Persimmon Tree:

Zone 4

(-20˚ to -10˚)

Zone 5

(-10˚ to -5˚)

Zone 6

(-5˚ to 5˚)

Zone 7

(5˚ to 10˚)

Zone 8

(10˚ to 20˚)

Zone 9

(20˚ to 30˚)

Zone 10

(30˚ to 40˚)



Song birds, Quail, and Dove begin to flock to the American Persimmon tree when the color begins to change orange to green.





Deer cannot reach the American persimmon fruit high in the tree until birds dislodge many of the persimmons to drop to the ground.




Unlike the Japanese Persimmon trees, the American Persimmon trees produce a singe fruit in smaller sizes and smaller cluster sizes.




Song birds and game birds flock to the American Persimmon tree as the leaves drop and reveal a tasty food source.




Hundreds of pounds of American persimmon fruits can fall from a large mature tree.



2008-08-07T06:50:29-0400


Buy Featured Products
From
Aaron's Nursery

Pink


The scuppernong dates back to the early American colonist who explored Virginia and found this delicious grape growing everywhere along the coastline.