Fruit Trees - Cherry Trees
Bing Cherry Tree
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The Bing Cherry is one of the finest commercial sweet cherries and it is the most famous sweet cherry variety. It produces a very large, delicious cherry that ranges in color from a deep garnet to almost black. The skin is smooth and glossy and the flesh firm and sweet. Bing cherries are good for cooking as well as out-of-hand eating. The flesh is very solid, reddish-purple in color, and is flavorful and juicy. The Bing Cherry tree requires cross-pollination to produce fruit.
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Lapin Cherry Tree
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The Lapin Cherry fruit is large and deep purple in color with lighter red flesh. The Lapin Cherry, (la-PAHN), the french word for "rabbit", is a big, beautiful, dark red cherry. These are some of the largest, juciest cherries that grow on trees.They are great for snacking, and so big, one cherry is a mouthful! The skin is bright in appearance and it is split resistant due to flexible skin. The Lapin is an excellent pollinator and is a heavy bearer.
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Montmorency Cherry Tree
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The Montmorency cherry is the most popular sour cherry in America and it is the classic pie cherry tree. Montmorency cherries have proven over the years to be outstanding for cooking and pie-making. The tree ripens the fruit in June and grows about 15 feet tall.The Montmorency cherry tree is self fertile and produces medium sized, dark red, cherries with good flavor and quality. Flesh is clear and yellow in color.
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Rainier Cherry Tree
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The Rainier Cherry tree produces sweet, large, yellow fruit with a red blush. The fruit is firm and the flesh is fine-textured and clear to light yellow. Fans of the Rainier appreciate the creamy-yellow flesh, which gives the blush of the skin a sunny undertone. The sweetness is what keeps them coming back for more.The Rainier has a distinct sweet flavor. It is a very productive tree that resists cracking, spurs and doubles. The tree will pollinate with the Bing Cherry. It will not self-pollinate.
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Stella Cherry Tree
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The Stella cherry is self-fruitful - no pollenizer needed. It has a large, nearly black, richly flavored sweet cherry. Similar to its parent, Lambert. Expect a later harvest with the Stella cherry. It will pollinate with the Bing cherry tree, except in mild winter climates. The flesh is also black in color.It is an excellent cherry for fresh eating. It is also resistant to cracking. Tree bears at a young age. Tree eventually reaches 15 to 16 feet tall. Watch for birds, they love the Stella.
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Sweetheart Cherry Tree
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The Sweetheart Cherry tree is a new self-fruitful cherry tree. It produces a fruit that remains crunchy when picked and eaten. The tree resists cracking and ripens late. It is fast becoming a popular cherry tree. Because the Sweetheart is self-pollinating, it can be used in location where you would only want to plant one tree for delightful cherry fruit.Sweetheart Cherries are the last cherry of the season! Their unique taste is a spectacular finale for the summer. Stretch out the cherry season with the Sweetheart cherry.
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Van Cherry Tree
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The Van cherry is very hardy. Resembles Bing cherries because the fruit is similar to Bing, though usually smaller. Pollinizer is required. It will pollinate (inter-fruitful) with all popular sweet cherries. Enjoy magnificent cherry blossoms every spring.Van is one of the best pollinators for any other sweet cherry tree. The Van cherry tree is hardy, vigorous and a prolific bearer of high quality sweet cherries.
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ACORN HILL
Acorn Hill is the name
we’ve given to our home. Situated in the
Blue Ridge Mountains of North
Carolina, it is so named for the thousands of acorns
produced by the red oaks growing here. We
spent years looking for just the right spot.
Some of the most important criteria were plenty of room to garden and
space for our menagerie of dogs and cats to safely run and play. And we found it here.
We have undertaken
several big outdoor projects and have many more planned. I have been taking pictures and making notes,
which in essence constitute a journal of these projects. I thought it might be interesting and perhaps
helpful to share our progress. So in
addition to my Garden Journal
where I routinely note what’s happening around
the garden, we’ve added Acorn Hill Garden Projects
to our site and intend to
update it as we complete specific projects.
The Acorn Hill Garden Projects detail specific projects from start to
finish with notes on what we learned in the process.
When we first came to
Acorn Hill, one of the first things I realized was that I had more great ideas
than I had time, energy, or money. I had
so many things that I hoped to accomplish the first year, but luckily we didn’t
get very much done. I say luckily
because when starting a garden in a new place it is critical to observe, for at
least one full cycle of the seasons, how the seasons change the existing
landscape, how the views from your house differ in summer and winter, and how
you and your family use your outdoor space.
So lesson number one was be
patient. Something I’ve been known
to have trouble with.
The projects listed below are things we’ve done so far, and
things we intend to complete in the near future. As I write the story of each, I’ll include my
thoughts on what we’ve done right and what we’ve learned from the things that
haven’t gone as planned. I hope you find
these stories useful and, if nothing else, amusing. We try to have fun at whatever we do,
otherwise, why do it!
So look for these stories coming soon to
Acorn Hill Garden Projects:
- A year
of observation, four seasons at Acorn Hill
- A path
through the wilderness, making the upper and lower trails
- The
long and short of it, creating a view from the porch
- Keeping
the hounds at bay, do-it-yourself garden fencing
- High on
a hill, creating the hilltop garden
We hope that you've enjoyed our collection of Fruit Trees - Cherry Trees. If you're looking for something
other than Fruit Trees - Cherry Trees, we hope that you'll find it here. We also hope that you'll come back often.
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