I've got an cornfield edge that has approx. 20 perssimmon trees, all within 200yds from each other. They range from 10' - 30' tall. The are LOADED with perssimmons this year. To the point that the limbs are hanging down within 2-3' off of the ground.
Last year the was very little perssimmons being produced.
During what time of year do they turn ripe enough for deer to start eating them? Has anyone had success hunting over perssimmons?
I've never hunted a poperty that has had perssimmons on it and this place is wrapped up w/ perssimmon all along the field edge.
Mike
I was always taught to not eat a persimmon off a tree until after the first couple of frosts. I have never seen where deer bothered the ones on the ground until they were orange and soft. Sadly, the land I hunt has few persimmons on it.
when they rippen on the ground deer will gather. you have a good spot wish i could find some around here food of the gods
I have had good luck hunting persimmon trees over the years. As stated above, they have to be ripe and even starting to rot on the ground before deer will eat them. Most of the deer I have harvested on persimmons are usually spooky when they first come in, let them settle down before making your shot.
I have heard the same thing, after a frost they begin to fall and the deer tear them up. I have one tree where I hunt and it is a pretty wimpy persimmon tree, the persimmons are pretty high so I can't comment on them eating off the lower limbs earlier or not. Good luck sounds like you have a decent spot this year!!
Persimmons are like cotton candy to those deer. I agree with the above stated it has to be after the frost. They are super bitter before hand. Ive got alot of persimmons on a farm I hunt but they all seem to be males so they arent putting on any fruit. Youve found a super spot! Stick with it and Id say it will be a great producer! Good luck.
QuoteOriginally posted by JamesV:
Most of the deer I have harvested on persimmons are usually spooky when they first come in, let them settle down before making your shot.
I will keep that in mind. :thumbsup:
I set up a loc-on two weeks aga on the field edge. I've got a shooting lane to the edge of the field and some inside the woods that is well enough for some shots. I hope my pre-season efforts pay off when the perssimmons start hitting the gournd. :pray:
Is anyone else ready for October!
QuoteOriginally posted by SheltonCreeker:
Ive got alot of persimmons on a farm I hunt but they all seem to be males so they arent putting on any fruit.
Yeah, I have probably 30-35 or so total. But approx. 20 of those are the ones bearing fruit.
They are more than bitter when unripe.
Several years age we were at my aunts and my mom told my cousin who was with us to taste one, (fresh off the tree in late summer), "they are really good".
So he gets one and takes a big bite. See, they have an astrigent effect and he could barely talk.
"An Wuf ow cu yu do at"!!!? Translates to, "Aunt Ruth how could you do that!?"
Mom was rolling on the ground!
After first heavy frost or a few light frosts
Here in the south they eat them the minute they fall on the ground. The wild persimmons are finishing bearing in the very start of our October archery season.
I keep mine fertized 50-50 do the whole drip edge every other spring. Your trees will always be hanging full. Those years the mast fails watch out. They clean them up quick.
The deer just love them in NOV after a couple frosts. The doe's hit them hard durning the pre-rut.I have a couple calling sites set up for those bucks that come looking for does.
I once shot a nice buck coming into a wild persimmon tree. It was October.
Late October thru mid November for Missouri...
I hunted a piece of property several years ago that had a few persimmon trees on it and once the fruit turned ripe the deer came to them in droves. With the number of trees your talking about you should be in for a heck of a season. I'd say good luck but I don't think you'll need it, so I'll say "make sure and pick a spot." TRW
They will ripen and fall without a frost. Fox, coyotes, armadillos, dogs, coons, possums and other critters will eat them as well. The critters know when they are ready. :)
Sounds like you have nice location.
Yep in November around here. The more rain the earlier. Most likely be early here this year as we have had lots of rain. When ripe the coons will climb up and eat most of them.
(http://i54.tinypic.com/28j8ldg.jpg)
They usually start dropping early to mid September here in the River bottoms I hunt. Deer and pigs as well as coons and such will come running. They usually drop before any kind of acorn down here and when you find a good one in the swamp its sweet. They do fall out fast. In late Sept on good persimmon years you can follow pig trails from one tree to the next for miles in the swamp.RC
in mississippi they drop early oct, which is perfect timing! campbell, in your case, you got a gold mine but the only downfall , in my opinion, would be too many producing in such a little area. it may have the deer "scattered". i've hunted an area kinda like you got, where there are several trees grouped in an area an the deer (most of the time) seem to not pick the tree i was sitting by! imagine that.. check for deer tracks, deer droppings, fresh persimmons on ground, etc and find the hot tree and you better have a quiver full of arrows! good luck
One year I had a small 6 pointer come in to a persimmon tree about 10 yards away and he ate everyone on the ground. When he went and walked off about 20 yards or so, one single persimmon fell to the ground. He turned right around, went over to it and ate it then turned around and went on his way. I love hunting around persimmons.
You've definitely got a honey hole. My largest buck came off a stand of persimmon trees. It was on a large farm my Grandpa used to lease. He fenced that area off from the horses. They'd literally get drunk off those fermented persimmons.
I built me a stand in a nearby forked oak tree. That was the first stand I ever stayed in all day. I'd get there in the dark and leave in the dark, unless I shot something. I swear I've never seen so many deer, raccoons and possums in one spot.