I have a theory that most gardeners and every person who has hiked somewhere in the eastern North American forest will at some point developed an infatuation with pawpaw trees. Mine occurred somewhere in the early 1980s and it hit me hard. Went all in and never drifted. And over the decades, I’ve learned enough to indulge myself in a little myth-busting. At that time, there were a lot of misconceptions: pawpaws seldom fruit. They require male trees to fruit or a dead animal dangling from a branch to rot and attract carion-seeking pollinators. Pawpaws could only grow in the shade and they were all but impossible to transplant. Much of this followed a train of logic derived from observing them in the wild, which was not indicative of what they can do in a cultivated setting.
But at first a lot of what I learned came from observing them in the wild. I had a job where I wound up clearing invasive honeysuckle from a wooded property. In and among the honeysuckle and other invasive species were a lot of pawpaw trees. Or, to be correct, there was a huge pawpaw colony. Thousands of what looked like individual trees were instead all stems coming from one root system, each a clone along with all the others, sprawled over at least 22 acres. And not one of them ever bore a fruit because of it. Over 15 years working there, I never saw a single fruit. It didn’t matter if it was during the honeysuckle years, after the honeysuckle years, in the sun, in the shade, down near the creek, whatever. And this is just what you’d expect from a single colony, because pawpaws are not self-fertile. They need another pawpaw, with its own personal genetics, soemwhere close to cross pollinate with. And that patch never had one.
Until I planted them. Yep. I threw a dozen or more seeds along the long, winding driveway and in time at least some of them grew and flowered and eventually those trees and some of the ones near them started producing fruit. Never bumper crops, but always some. I know there’s a bit of a leap of faith when I say that a single patch covered that much ground and maybe even more on adjoining properties, but why couldn’t a suckering plant not spread itself over such acreage in a landscape halfway down the path of transfoming back into a forest after a stint serving as a pasture?
And because it was all one clone, digging up and transplanting any of its little sprouts was useless. These were just young shoots coming up from large trunk roots and you could never dig enough root for them to make it on their own. Hence, one of the first myths I read about pawpaws was busted. It was common knowledge at the time that pawpaws were impossible to transplant. Ok, that is indeed true if you’re digging them from the wild. But it’s 100% false, I came to find out, if you are transplanting seed-grown pawpaws out of containers.
It was probably in the 2000s that I began growing them from seeds and I grew literally hundreds of them. Initially, I planted seeds I had purchased but in only five years or so my original seedlings were already producing fruit so I started planting seeds from those. The best method I found for germinating the seeds was quick, easy, cheap, lazy and educational. I simply filled a 5-gallon pot with Pro-Mix amended with some finely chipped limestown gravel. This made the pot heavier (and less likely to get kicked over) and the mix a little looser. I then layered seeds shoulder to shoulder over the entire top of the media and covered them with another inch of media. Then I simply left the pot outside for the winter.
That next spring, about 75% germination. But not in the way I expected. That 75% germinated when the media’s temperature hit about 70F, which is normal and exactly what I expected. However, with the pawpaw seedlings’ spare, taproot root systems, they pulled easily from the 5-gallon pot. From there, I either transplanted them into their own containers or straight into the ground. But because they pulled so cleanly, I never had to dump out the 5-gallon nursery pot. Therefore, the remaining seeds stayed in the pot and I figured they would germinate the following spring. Again, which would be normal. But to my surprise, in a sweltering midsummer heatwave when the potting mix must have gotten into the 80s or 90s, almost all the remaining seed germinated. Well, hell, that’s not supposed to happen. So maybe that was caused by some genetic quirk leftover from pawpaws being the sole temperate species from an otherwise tropical genus? I don’t know.
At that time I was growing a lot of tree species from seed. One of the best things about doing that is having bounties of seedlings lying around makes them expendable. You can try all sorts of things with them. For instance, regarding the question as to whether pawpaws can actually grow in full sun, I planted some out in the open and, yep, they did just fine! And they didn’t get much in the way of extra water. Since that time I’ve seen others grown in full sun and they, too, are growing well. In fact, when they are grown in the open, they develop a pronounced and appealing pyramidal form.
The twelve I planted in full sun, I planted them all close together hoping to foster good pollination. It did and I get a lot of fruit. More fruit than I can use. In fact, when ripening is at its peak, the whole yard smells like pawpaw fruit. Its both wonderful and cloying at the same time. Funny, with so many bearing pawpaws at hand, I’ve never developed a taste for them. Virtually all of them are consumed by wildlife of some kind. And, by the way, I’ve never hung a dead animal from them and I still get great pollination. Every year. We’ve never had a bad year for fruiting.
They tell me SW Ohio is at the heart of the pawpaw’s native range. I haven’t looked into that, so maybe that too is pawpaw lore with little to no attachment to truth. Who cares? I love pawpaw trees. In the shade, spindly and stretching. In the sun, pyramidal and bedecked with foliage of a tropical flare. Lumpy fruits that look like green potatoes that have creamy flesh that tastes sort of like bananas and sort of like nothing else. The clearest yellow fall color. It’s even a host for one of my favorite butterflies, the zebra swallowtail. So go ahead and plant a pawpaw. Put it where you can live with another stem or two, or ten, because they will sucker. Pawpaws may appear to be small trees. The tag and the books surely say so. But given enough time, that pawpaw you plant might colonize the neighborhood, and it might, just might, exceed in biomass all the so-called bigger trees. Who knows? I suspect we still have a lot to learn about pawpaws.
Great rant Steve! Near Blaine, Ky 50 years ago my Grandfather fed Pawpaws to the pigs from a few colonies along the shady lane up to the pens. They ate the fruit before the corn. Another huge colony along a creek just south of Granville, Ohio along the road where my in-laws lived.
Thanks! Nice hearing from you Andy!
At an arboretum sale recently l was offered baby pawpaw trees. Reading your rant l am SO glad l resisted. I already have all the colonizers l can bear or try to rip out: honeysuckle, “japanese an enemy”, poison ivy, mint saboteurs, guerrilla lilac remnants, bermuda grass, and a violently invasive weed with rhizomes causing me to dig out a daylily bed and start over. Dodged a bullet, it seems.
Scott:
I always enjoy your posts. This one was esp
Intriging. I’ve been growing pawpaws in SE Pennsylvania for 15+ years. I only planted one tree and as you state, I now have a small pawpaw patch. Not sure where my pollinator lives but I get a reasonable fruit set every year.
Our house is in an area where we have a sizeable deer herd, but the deer don’t touch the pawpaw leaves.
Wondering about topping a few scraggly trees to see if they will get bushy.
Hi S McKinney! Thanks for the nice comment. I never tried pruning any of my trees so I have no advice for you. But that’s an interesting idea. If you have enough stems that you could sacrifice one, try it. I think it’s a better gamble on any that might get more sun. It would be interesting to see how people growing them as an orchard crop prune them.
Hi Larua,
Although nowhere near as insistant as honeysuckle, pawpaws are colonizers. There easy enough to control–you just cut them out, but they’ll come back and it is an added task.
A really interesting piece. I’m too far north to grow pawpaws but love learning about them.
I love that you love the tree , cultivate it but don’t like the fruit. I do not like bananas, so wouldn’t like the fruit either. Just a little too far north in Ohio to grow them, or so I’m told. Maybe sometime soon we will be growing them. I’m wondering if you planted them along the edge of your property the deer would go for them and leave your garden alone?
Pawpaws are native to northern Ohio. I am in NE Indiana and they are abundant. The bright green on the map are counties where Asimina triloba are native. http://bonap.net/MapGallery/County/Asimina%20triloba.png
Thanks for sharing, Martha!
Well, dang ! I’m in a bright green county, I’m gonna have to go on a paw paw hunt.
Hi Pat and Tibs, I do have mine on the property line. In fact, in my neighbor’s yard. It’s part of a screen they let me plant that gives us both privacy. Being on the other side of the fence, mine (or my neighbor’s) trees are exposed to a very large deer here, who never browse them. Bucks will rub them, but seemingly not as much as other young trees.
Thank you for the interesting info. I’ll look for the pawpaws next time I’m up in Kentucky. Cave Hill is awesome. Everything seems to grow well there. Must be something in the soil.
It’s a special place and, yes, there’s something magical going on with that limestone soil. They’ve even got some very happy, healthy sourwoods!
Thank you, Scott. I love pawpaws, also, but we diverge on the fruit that I find tasty. It’s a little messy getting to the delicious pulp, however. And you need to wait until the fruit is really mushy, not just soft. Short shelf life. Raccoons will likely get there first. (At least they leave neat piles of beautiful seeds behind.) I use a paring knife to remove the skin. Forget trying to remove the seeds. Otherwise, you’ll waste most of the fruit. Instead, eat the fruit outdoors with your bare hands and spit out the seeds. Watermelon style. Or make pawpaw ice cream. Yummy! I recommend a book for anyone interested in pawpaws: “Pawpaw: In Search of America’s Forgotten Fruit.”
Allen, good call on recommending the book. A friend just gave me that. I will admit that I’ve had some pawpaw fruits that are better than others. Could have been because of ripeness. Could also have been from a better tree.
Great rant today, Scott! I learned a lot, as usual.
We have many pawpaws at the farm in Kentucky, which Steve loves. Every spring he brings a bagful home. I’m tried planting some in our back meadow here in Cincinnati, but so far they are overwhelmed by the bigger plants. Fingers crossed.
Good luck!
I have a New York state co-champion Pawpaw in my garden, about 30′ tall, 9″ diameter, and it would produce a few fruit every fall, so I think it’s slightly self fertile, since I’m not aware of any other trees in the area. Like you, I planted another clone a few years ago and when it started to flower both trees produced dozens of fruits, which are dropping this week. I’ve been gathering, peeling the skin, cutting up the flesh, removing the seeds and freezing for later use.
Hi Steve, thanks for sharing. Glad your tree finally got a mate!
Where does a person get paw paw seeds?