Yes, you can grow a plum tree from a plum stone. Plums are good, hardy fruit trees, especially good for more northern climates. However, you must be VERY patient; it can take five to seven years for your little guy to bear any fruit!
Plant your guy in well-drained, fertile soil, and feed him with a wee bit of ammonium nitrate (not too much!) Make sure he gets lots of sun.
Also, your little plum tree may not produce the yummy plum like the one you planted. People who work in plant nurseries usually plant a stone, then let it grow a bit, then graft another variety into it. This is what produces yummy fruit. But give your guy a try.
You never can tell with plums.
Hope this helps ;-)
2006-09-21 10:55:53
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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purely place the pit, factor part down [no longer genuine considerable], in properly drained pot of soil. Water whilst the exterior of the soil gets dry. I used to do this whilst i wanted to enhance one. purely be warned that it extremely is germination relies upon on how ripe [or mature] the seed replaced into whilst the plum replaced into picked. it may no longer improve so, warn your son so he retains attempting and would not get discouraged adequate to furnish in to the failure. perhaps recommend another sort of seeds to plant on a similar time. That way if the plums do no longer improve and the different seeds do, he would be attentive to he purely had a undesirable seed.
2016-10-17 10:03:02
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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Yes,but having been cross pollinated,you have little chance to get the same fruit from your pit(when grown).If you want to try put it in a light loamy soil 1or2 inches below soil level in a 4inches pot.Sink that pot down in the ground (level of pot with level of ground)for the winter,making sure it is not in too wet or to dry area.Cover it with at thin mesh if you have squirrels ,cats,rats,etc..in the garden.be patient in late spring with luck it might germinate(try more than one).After a year, pot up in bigger pot or plant in full soil in proper position.Again it would more prudent to buy a named variety from a nursery or graft a scion from which the fruit come from onto another plum.Hope you understand my jargon.good luck
p.s:if you live in warmer region put your pit in a closed ziplock bag with moist sphagnum moss and leave it in your fridge for 4 or 5 month before planting.
2006-09-21 11:05:59
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I would let it dry out completely before planting it. Then I would put some real good potting soil in a pot and plant the seed. Keep it moist not soggy. Keep a grow light on it in the winter.
Then I would take another seed-let it dry out real good and put it in a dish of water and see it it opened and sent out a shoot. Either way they have to stay moist til they root. m
2006-09-21 13:00:09
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answer #4
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answered by Mache 6
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throw pit in ground...wait... however... that seed or pit... will be different from the one you ate... so if u want the same one you ate u need to find out which of the thousands of cultivars that fruit came from and grow that specific tree... or you can grow that pit to a tree and see what happens just for fun...
2006-09-21 10:45:28
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answer #5
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answered by kayakakas 3
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