|
Follow-Up Postings:
|
| This large jujube tree is from Houston, TX. of Unknown variety. Maybe Sherwood or Lang? Tony |
This post was edited by tonytran on Sat, Dec 20, 14 at 23:00
|
| That looks like to be about 25' tall? 10 years old? |
|
- Posted by bhawkins 8A Dallas (bobhawkins695@gmail.com) on Sat, Dec 13, 14 at 19:24
| Here's a picture of a Korean jujube orchard taken a year ago. They keep their trees maybe 10-12ft tall; interesting the Chinese grow them so much taller. btw I was Xian, Shanxi, China last month. Lots of jujubes but they were smaller than Li; maybe the Shanxi Li's were out of season |
|
| Those trees are still young. Maybe less than 10 years old. But they still look like 15' tall. |
|
| Bob, Is this your nice looking SO jujube photo. I got your wood this past Spring and the new graft is about 2 feet tall with a very nice contorted branches. Tony |
|
|
- Posted by bhawkins 8A Dallas (bobhawkins695@gmail.com) on Sun, Dec 14, 14 at 7:00
| Hi Tony, yes that's my contorted so. It s hard to get it under control, I chop off 5 ft each year and it grows right back. My Korean farmer friend looked at it and said it'd be much more productive if I kept it shorter and pruned more. redsun when I looked at the korean orchard I thought they were older and shorter but I'll ask my friend. I don't believe they spray at all but I'll check that too. We have a language barrier korean vs english but I'll see what I can find out. Your china pictures are impressive did you travel there? |
|
| The Korean trees are about 4-5" diameter, right? I think Bob's So is larger, about 6-7" diameter? Looks about 20' tall. So if not pruned heavily, the tree can grow much larger... The Chinese jujube is from a video I borrowed.... For commercial production, the trees are planted very dense and a lot of maintenance. There are also many kinds of chemical sprays people can use. They also cut the barks on the trunk to force the fruiting. I believe they replace the entire orchard some year down the road. Maybe in about 10-15 years?? So it is quite intensive, not sure if good for home orchard.... |
|
| Bob, My Aunt Vietnamese friend in Orange County, CA grew some of highly recommended jujube varieties. They looked real good. Tony |
|
|
|
|
|
| Tony, Those are very nice jujube collections. I still have room for more jujube trees. I'll try to graft some when I have the rootstock. |
|
- Posted by bhawkins 8A Dallas (bobhawkins695@gmail.com) on Sun, Dec 14, 14 at 17:14
| Redsun I appreciate all the research your doing, I can't say I understand all the aspects of growing Jujubes. My Contorted So is currently about 16 ft tall, diameter is 8" at the trunk; it's been my fastest growing jujube. The korean orchard is about 30 years old. They prune aggressively and keep the tree height low, not mucher higher than a person can reach. When I was there the farmer tried to show me how to prune, they even prune the leaves during summer; but there was quite a language barrier and no leaves when I was there. I'm still trying to get an answer if they spray. They harvest by shaking the tree and knocking branches with a stick. |
|
- Posted by bhawkins 8A Dallas (bobhawkins695@gmail.com) on Sun, Dec 14, 14 at 17:17
| Tony those are beautiful Jujubes. They really seem to like California. I've gotten almost no fruit from my GA866 and Sherwood yet |
|
| How old is your So tree? I can't believe the Korean orchard is 30 year old. The trunk is not thick. If they shake the fruits, then what is the purple to prune them low? Some of the Chinese jujube farms are very dense. Spacing is about 2 meters, or 6' within rows. But they use extensive commercial practices and a lot of chemical controls. They force intensive fruit production, then rebuild the entire orchard within a short time frame. With the extensive chemical uses, the soil salt level is very high. They also use trenching to fertilize the root systems.... |
|
- Posted by bhawkins 8A Dallas (bobhawkins695@gmail.com) on Sun, Dec 14, 14 at 21:02
| My so is about 7 years old |
Please Note: Only registered members are able to post messages to this forum. If you are a member, please log in. If you aren't yet a member, join now!
Return to the Fruit & Orchards Forum
Information about Posting
- You must be logged in to post a message. Once you are logged in, a posting window will appear at the bottom of the messages. If you are not a member, please register for an account.
- Please review our Rules of Play before posting.
- Posting is a two-step process. Once you have composed your message, you will be taken to the preview page. You will then have a chance to review your post, make changes and upload photos.
- After posting your message, you may need to refresh the forum page in order to see it.
- Before posting copyrighted material, please read about Copyright and Fair Use.
- We have a strict no-advertising policy!
- If you would like to practice posting or uploading photos, please visit our Test forum.
- If you need assistance, please Contact Us and we will be happy to help.
Learn more about in-text links on this page here





















