Skip to content
Instant Orchard Bundles Available - Click Here
Instant Orchard Bundles

[GP Revert] GROWING FRUIT TREES CHERRIES

Growing Cherry trees

 

Growing Cherry trees

A cherry is a small, sweet or tart, edible stone fruit produced by a cherry tree.  Cherry trees are grown worldwide and have been cultivated by humans for centuries. There are over 600 varieties of cherries so picking the right one for your area intended use is important. Edible cherries are usually divided into two groups: Sweet cherries (Prunus avium) or sour cherries (Prunus cerasus). Sweet cherries are typically favored for fresh eating and drying, while sour cherries are superior for cooking, baking, and canning.

 


Choosing a Variety

Size

Cherry tree sizes depend on the variety and rootstock combination. In general, our sweet cherries on Gisela 5 rootstock can be maintained at  10-12‘tall and 10-12‘ wide. On Gisela 3 rootstock they can be maintained at 8-10’ tall and wide. Tart cherries are generally less vigorous than the sweet cherries and can be managed at a couple feet shorter than sweet cherries on the same rootstock.

 


 

Pollination

Some sweet cherries are not self-fertile and require a different variety as a pollinizer to produce fruit. In addition, there are also specific incompatibilities, varieties that bloom at the same time but will not pollinize each other. Some sweet cherries and the tart cherries are self-fertile, so do not require a different variety as a pollinizer to produce fruit. Please see our cherry bloom chart for more specifics.

Sweet and tart cherries do not usually bloom at the same time so are not good pollinizers for each other.

The pollinizers should be planted no further than pollen carrying bees will fly, with no line of sight obstruction, to ensure proper cross-pollination. That distance varies with different bees, 100’ should be a good average distance.



Ripening Time

Fruit ripen early to mid- summer, depending on variety. Choose from different ripening times to extend your fresh picking season.

 

 


USDA Hardiness Zone

Sweet cherries are generally hardy to USDA zones 5-9, Tart cherries to USDA zones 4-9, unless noted in the description. This rating tells you the minimum winter temperature the plants typically survive when properly hardened off. On our web site you will find a USDA Hardiness Maps which provides information on the average minimum winter temperature in your location, by zip code.

 


Chill Hours

Many plants native to locations that have cold winters have a Chill Hour requirement to ensure uniform waking up of flower and leaf buds in the spring. The chill hour requirement of plants varies by species, by cultivar, and sometimes by the level of dormancy achieved.

 


Where to Plant Your Tree

Cherries need to be planted where they receive at least 8 hours of direct sunlight measured in early summer (late June to early August). Sufficient sun exposure triggers the initiation of new flower buds for the next growing season, without which there will be no fruit. Fruit ripening and flavor development are also benefited by the carbohydrate production stimulated by the sun, as well as it’s heat.

The Gisela rootstocks we graft our cherries on prefer a well-drained loose soil that is moderately rich with a pH around 6.3-6.8. Avoid heavy clay soils. Improve your soil where you intend to plant by mixing an inch or two of plant based organic matter (manures are best for vegetable gardens), peat, or coconut coir into an area 1 1/2 to 2 times the diameter of the needed planting hole and up to a foot deep. A 2-4” deep layer of mulch (straw, leaves, or wood chips) applied after planting will continue to improve the soil.

Allow sufficient space for both the top of the tree and it’s roots when selecting the planting location. Refer to size descriptions for each variety, keeping in mind these are generally managed or pruned sizes, not maximum potential sizes. If you are planting an orchard be sure to include enough space between rows for transporting supplies in and fruit out.

 


Growing in Containers

To grow a Cherry tree in a pot you need a final container size of at least 20 gallons for Gisela 3 rootstocks, and 25 gallons for Gisela 5 rootstocks. Trees will grow larger in a larger container, but make sure you have the ability and tools to move the pots heavy weight.  It is important for the establishment of the root system to gradually increase the size of the container over several years, rather than go from small directly to very large.

Do not use soil from your garden in the pot, instead use a potting soil mix with some added compost. For larger pots use a potting mix that has larger particles in addition to the smaller.

 


Care and Maintenance

Watering Your Tree

This is the most important and often the most difficult part of successfully growing plants. There are many factors, including the humidity, temperature, soil type, wind, and amount of direct sun that affect how much and how often water should be applied.

A general rule of thumb for plants in the ground is to ensure they receive an inch of water per week over the root zone. An inch of water is equivalent to about ¾ to one gallon per square foot of soil surface area. The typical three foot diameter planting hole would need 7 ½ to 10 gallons of water per week provided by rainfall or by the gardener.

Apply this water once a week, two times per week if soil is fast draining. This will of course depend on your own conditions and the plants you are growing! DO NOT waterlightly each day because this results in a wet surface and dry root zone area. The soil should be moist but not soggy to a depth of about a foot for most growing plants. The top inch or two can feel dry, and the plant still be well watered. The trick is to have the water available where the roots are. In hotter and sunnier areas, a mulch of straw, bark, etc. can greatly ease the burden of summer watering. For plants in containers, water until the soil is saturated and water comes out of the drainage holes. Let the container dry until the soil is dry to the touch 1-2 inches down (more deep with deeper pots) and the container is lighter in weight. A plant that has wilted canbe receiving either too much or too little water.

In rainy areas like the Pacific Northwest most of the plants that we offer will need relatively little supplemental irrigation ONCE THEY ARE WELL ESTABLISHED in the ground and have had a chance to develop a good root system. However even here it is important to make sure plants have regular, deep watering during the first couple of growing seasons, and the first summer is especially critical. In drier areas, or where soils do not retain water well, permanent irrigation is essential. Remember that you don’t want your trees to just survive, but rather to thrive. Make sure they get the water where they need it, starting at the drip line and extending away from the tree up to several feet (for older trees) where the feeder roots will be. Drip irrigation and soaker hoses can be an efficient way to deliver the water.

 

Fertilization

For good steady growth and high productivity, your trees need to have adequate amounts of various mineral nutrients. Some people are fortunate and have naturally rich fertile soil.

Use an all-purpose or balanced fertilizer. A couple of inches of well-rotted compost on the root zone can also be an effective fertilizer. A generous leaf or straw mulch around your trees will not only conserve moisture and help in weed control, but also keeps your soil healthy by building up humus, attracting earthworms, and supporting beneficial fungal organisms. This encourages young trees to be strong, healthy and productive. Avoid applying fertilizer after early summer, doing so can encourage lots of soft new growth that is much more likely to be damaged by winter cold. Excessive use of fertilizer can in-crease disease problems on your plants and can even kill them.

As a general guide, if your tree is producing about one foot of new growth or more a year and has healthy looking foliage, it may not need much or any fertilizer.



Pests and Diseases

Find out what insects and diseases are typical in your area. Ask your local co-operative extension professional what the typical insect and disease issues are in your area. Then you can make selections based on resistance or tolerance information available in our catalog, or, make a plan for controlling problems you can expect with the susceptible varieties you prefer to grow. If you see resistance information about a particular disease for one variety but not another of the same kind of fruit, then that variety may be susceptible or might not have been tested so is unknown. The following are some of the more common issues.

 

 

Bacterial Canker

Symptoms

Sunken blackish cankers on stems or trunk, wilting and death of branches, gummy ooze from cankers, dead dormant buds.

Control Methods

Copper fungicide in early fall and again in January. Cauterize cankers with a torch in early summer. Apply foliar micronutrients to aid tree immune system.

Comments

This disease is most severe when spring frosts damage bark or when pruning is done in winter or early spring before bud break. Newly planted trees are especially susceptible.

 

 

Brown Rot

Symptoms

Wilting and death of twigs and blossoms. Fruits turn rotten, gray-brown in color, often hanging from the tree as “mummies”.

Control Methods

Promptly remove any infected twigs or mummified fruits. Apply copper, sulfur, or lime-sulfur fungicide at petal fall, midsummer, and again in fall.

Comments

Blossom brown rot can be a difficult problem in very wet spring seasons. Spray promptly as soon as dry weather permits.

 

 

Peach Leaf Curl

Symptoms

New leaves blister, deform, turn reddish, and eventually die.

Control Methods

Plant resistant varieties. Lime and sulfur applied starting in mid-December. Spray are 3-4 week intervals.

Comments

Prevent infection by covering the trees from December to February to keep stems dry. Control times vary with climate. For low-chill varieties, apply spray 3-4 weeks earlier.

 

Cherry Slug

Symptoms

Dark olive green slug like larvae skeletonize leaves, especially common in summer

Control Methods

Insecticidal soap spinosad, pyrethrin, rotenone dust, or bioneem. Pick off and destroy by hand.

Comments

Trees can tolerate up to 25% defoliation with little harm. Not actually a slug; just resembles a slug. Also affects pear, plum, hawthorn, and mountain ash.

 

Shot Hole Disease/Corynium Blight

Symptoms

Small reddish-purple spots on leaves, which fall out leaving holes. Fruits may also be spot ted. On peaches, twigs may also be spotted and develop cankers.

Control Methods

Bordeaux mix or copper fungicides in early fall, winter, and spring.

Comments

Spores are spread primarily by splashing water, keep sprinkler water off foliage and fruit.

 

Scale

Symptoms                                   

Small barnacle-like bumps on branches and leaves.

Control Methods

Dormant oil spray in early spring.

Comments

Insecticidal soap or soap/oil spray during juvenile phase.

 

Spotted Wing Drosophila

Symptoms

Eggs are deposited 7-10 days prior to fruit ripening; holes in fruit, spotty molding, larvae in fruit, exuding berry sap, scarring.

Control Methods

Monitor with traps. Spinosad. Sanitation: In fall, adults feed on over ripe or split fruit (both vegetable and tree fruit) to prepare for winter.

Comments

Contact your local extension office for the most up to date information on spotting wing drosophila.

 

Shot Hole Borer

Symptoms

Invades apples, chestnuts, cherries and other trees. Pin size holes in trunk spring or summer. Look close to see sawdust around hole and notice fermented smell. Limbs or whole trees suddenly die.

Control Methods

No effective organic methods. Whitewash trunk and lower limbs with interior white latex paint diluted 50% with water in fall to confuse beetles next spring. Infestations bad some years. Borers live in alder and other trees.

Comments

Bark beetles sense volatile oils from stressed trees. Keep trees healthy, particularly when newly planted. Monitor and destroy infested trees. Generations occur April-May, June-July and August-September.

 

Deer

Symptoms

Browsed shortened branches. Leaves are obviously munched on or plants are pulled up.

Control Methods

Fences or cages at least 8’ tall. Plastic mesh, electric, or woven wire fences.

Comments

At Raintree, an 8’ woven wire deer fence has worked best. Repellents don’t work consistently. and only trained large dogs patrolling the perimeter are effective. Some have had success with the product “Deerchaser.”

 

Bird

Symptoms

Fruits disappear or have gaping holes in them. Strawberries, blueberries, cherries and filberts are most susceptible but most fruits suffer occasionally.

Control Methods

Reflective Bird Scare Tape can work well. Bird netting. Cages.

Comments

Blue Jays start harvesting filberts when ready to pick, and so should you. Nuts dropped by jays are usually empty.

 

 

Vole/Mouse/Rabbit

Symptoms

Bark eaten in a band from soil level up to 8” and roots eaten too, usually in snowy areas with lots of mulch or tall grass at base of trees.

Control Methods

Keep mulch 4”-6” away from trunk. Keep grass short and 1’-2’ from trunk. Use vinyl tree guard wrapped around trunk until tree well-established.

Comments

Voles and mice will chew a couple inches above ground and also into the root system. Rabbits will chew up to 8” high, particularly apple trees.

 

Aphid

Symptoms

1/32 to 1/8” long pear shaped insects that multiply rapidly, espe- cially on the underside of leaves and on stems. Can be pink, green, black or white. Leaves show red blisters or are curled-down and stems turn black with sooty mold.

Control Methods

Natural predators like lady bugs and parasitic wasps often provide control. Knock aphids off with water spray. Spray with Pyrethrin, Rotenone, Insecticidal Soap, or delayed dormant oil. Control ants if they are also present.

Comments

Trees can tolerate some infestation. Monitor in late spring and summer. Control is more important on new trees. Grow plants that attract predators, i.e. dill or yarrow.

 

 

Ant

Symptoms

Numerous ants scurrying up and down the tree trunk; aphids, scale or mealybug present in large numbers, lots of sticky honeydew, perhaps sooty mold.

Control Methods

Find hill and apply pesticide. Apply Tangle Trap over 2-3” wide band of paper wrapped around trunk. Eliminate other pathways into tree.

Comments

Ants nurture and protect these insects in exchange for their sugary secretions. Insects may be difficult to control until the ants are controlled.

 

 

Brown Marmorated Stink Bug

Symptoms

Poking-type feeding damage followed by decay on fruits, nuts, berries and leaves. Deformity in the healthy tissue surrounding the dead tissue. Brown spots can show up in stored fruit.

Control Methods

Monitor with traps, some broad spectrum pesticides may work. Researchers are working on finding effective controls, but no info has been released yet.

Comments

BMSB over winters in groups in dry protected areas, such as houses. If you find them on or in your home use the vacuum, squishing releases their defensive stink.  See stopbmsb.org for more info. Feeding begins in spring when the weather warms up and continues until new adults go dormant for winter.

 

Sunscald

Symptoms

Vertical splits in bark appear spring or early summer, usually on the south or east side of the tree. Disease or insect infestations may then occur.

Control Methods

Whitewash trunk and lower limbs with interior latex paint cut 50/50 with water each fall until bark has thickened. Avoid planting in frost pockets or where water collects in winter.

Comments

Injury occurs during pattern of warm days followed by freezing nights. Sap gets stuck in trunk, freezes, then rapidly thaws in the warm sun the next day, rupturing cells.