![]() |
RE: My mystery tree has fruit... help again??
Buckmaster, what you have there is a pear tree my friend. I've grown them, sold them, and chopped many up up due to their weak bark and short life span. That close-up of the fruit and the ovalleaf structure is a dead ringer. I've seen many in the semi-wild state with tremendous thorns. Damn things will go right through one of your fingers if your not careful cutting them up.
|
RE: My mystery tree has fruit... help again??
ORIGINAL: live2Draw are they sticky, the fruits that is? kinda looks like a paw paw ![]() |
RE: My mystery tree has fruit... help again??
that is not persimmons.looks like minature pears to me.Persimmons trees need more than a single tree to germinate and produce fruit,thats why when you find one there is another one close by.
|
RE: My mystery tree has fruit... help again??
ORIGINAL: pigiron Buckmaster, what you have there is a pear tree my friend. I've grown them, sold them, and chopped many up up due to their weak bark and short life span. That close-up of the fruit and the ovalleaf structure is a dead ringer. I've seen many in the semi-wild state with tremendous thorns. Damn things will go right through one of your fingers if your not careful cutting them up. |
RE: My mystery tree has fruit... help again??
ORIGINAL: Snood Slapper ORIGINAL: live2Draware they sticky, the fruits that is?kinda looks like a paw paw
|
RE: My mystery tree has fruit... help again??
ORIGINAL: live2Draw ORIGINAL: Snood Slapper ORIGINAL: live2Draware they sticky, the fruits that is?kinda looks like a paw paw
|
RE: My mystery tree has fruit... help again??
could they be kumquats?
|
RE: My mystery tree has fruit... help again??
ORIGINAL: early in ORIGINAL: pigiron Buckmaster, what you have there is a pear tree my friend. I've grown them, sold them, and chopped many up up due to their weak bark and short life span. That close-up of the fruit and the ovalleaf structure is a dead ringer. I've seen many in the semi-wild state with tremendous thorns. Damn things will go right through one of your fingers if your not careful cutting them up. Callery pear has escaped from cultivation in 25 states and is reported as new to California, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, and West Virginia. [/align][ol]Prev Next[/ol]Gallery Index Image 5 of 8 [/align] View Full-Size [/align]Steve Nix Open Grown Wild Callery Pear [/align]Studies suggest that the species is rapidly becoming invasive in much of its horticultural range in the eastern United States. Some of the escaped trees appear to be of hybrid origin, perhaps between callery pear and P. betulifolia or P. bretschneideri. Gallery pear often produces thorny thickets as it escapes into marginal and disturbed areas, and appears to be reproducing readily in the wild. [/align] [/align] [/align]It is the wild version of callery Early-in. [/align] [/align]I don't mean to keep going back and forth but.......I to am positive.:DThe wild version is very common in overgrown lots and fields. As a wintertime business when I was young, I cut the branches, put them in bundles,and wouldforce the buds to near bloom. There was a high demand for them in the New York flower district on 27th street. [/align][/align] |
RE: My mystery tree has fruit... help again??
ORIGINAL: pigiron ORIGINAL: early in ORIGINAL: pigiron Buckmaster, what you have there is a pear tree my friend. I've grown them, sold them, and chopped many up up due to their weak bark and short life span. That close-up of the fruit and the ovalleaf structure is a dead ringer. I've seen many in the semi-wild state with tremendous thorns. Damn things will go right through one of your fingers if your not careful cutting them up. Callery pear has escaped from cultivation in 25 states and is reported as new to California, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, and West Virginia. [/align][ol]Prev Next[/ol]Gallery Index Image 5 of 8 [/align] View Full-Size [/align]Steve Nix Open Grown Wild Callery Pear [/align]Studies suggest that the species is rapidly becoming invasive in much of its horticultural range in the eastern United States. Some of the escaped trees appear to be of hybrid origin, perhaps between callery pear and P. betulifolia or P. bretschneideri. Gallery pear often produces thorny thickets as it escapes into marginal and disturbed areas, and appears to be reproducing readily in the wild. [/align] [/align] [/align]It is the wild version of callery Early-in. [/align] [/align]I don't mean to keep going back and forth but.......I too am positive.:DThe wild version is very common in overgrown lots and fields. As a wintertime business when I was young, I cut the branches, put them in bundles,and wouldforce the buds to near bloom. There was a high demand for them in the New York flower district on 27th street. [/align][/align] |
RE: My mystery tree has fruit... help again??
That is a Bradford Pear. My parents have three in their yard.
|
| All times are GMT -8. The time now is 04:35 PM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.