Whoa, nice! I hope to find one in the wild someday.
What state are you in? If you donβt mind me asking
South Carolina. I missed the fruiting season for paw paws this year but Iβll be back next year
Keep in mind that there will often be no fruit. Pawpaws spread in monoclonal colonies, and a colony canβt pollinate itself. I live surrounded by many pawpaw groves, but only a few actually make fruit. Supposedly you can spray the trees down with fish emulsion to attract the flies that pollinate them, but that still only helps if you have 2 non-clones next to each other
Finding them is pretty easy once you know what to look for, but until youβve seen them, itβs hard. Easiest time to find them as a novice is in the spring. They have very unique flowers that pop out before there are any leaves. Also, in the late summer/ fall, easiest way to find them is by smell. The fruit is so fragrant, if you know the smell, you can find the tree.
They have those purple flowers that hang downward, right?
Iβve seen some pawpaw saplings in pots before, but maybe I should have gotten a closer look, haha! I guess that doesnβt necessarily translate to how theyβll look in the wild. Hopefully Iβll have a chance to get the smell down at some point, haha!
Hereβs a few more things to look out for. They are fine growing in shade. They usually are in groups (clonal colonies, technically) unlike some similar looking trees. Deer donβt eat them, so they do really well in areas with an overabundance of deer that eat all their competition.