I live in northern Indiana and have 5 healthy, mature fruit trees. I have a pear, plum, apple, and 2 cherry (1 marchionne and 1 bing). Fruit trees are not only nice for you to enjoy but usually grow plenty for the whole neighborhood.
@MihirJain2 жыл бұрын
Do you still have cherry trees?
@morgang5922 жыл бұрын
Awesome!! I just did planted two cherry trees first time and wondering if I screwed up after watching this lol are they hardy? I worry about our soil being too hard around the tree for it to do well in winter. We live in Oswego NY. I hope to add pear, peach and apple trees to our yard eventually. Enjoy your harvest!
@garden_geek6 жыл бұрын
You, your family, and your videos are so wonderful! Your daughter is about the same age as mine as well, she’s adorable! We moved into a new home this year and were thrilled to discover lots of fruit trees in our yard. Your channel has been my primary resource for learning how to care for them. I had never gardened before and now I’m hooked! So I just wanted to say thanks, I’m enjoying every video you put out!
@CaraWells4 жыл бұрын
I genuinely appreciate that you do videos that are searchable by plant type. Even with a lot of plants having the same growing styles when I want to learn something specific I can always count on this page providing a video for it.
@reenegovender21673 жыл бұрын
Thank you for yiur expert information you talented its so wonderful to have teach us God richly bless you
@Johnlugard10 ай бұрын
Thank you for your expert information your talented is so wonderful to have teach us God richly blessed you😊
@LeasLace6 ай бұрын
Last year I planted some seeds I had got from store bought cherries..a few sprouted.I gave birth to my daughter at home and decided to put the placenta under the tree for extra nutrition 😅..so far so good Everything grows super fast in my garden( pears are growing now instead of in the fall).. so I'm hoping for cherries in 4 years ..wish us luck!
@alphanumeric15294 жыл бұрын
Oh, I also wanted to add, I've followed much of the advice in this vid, except fertilization, and our cherry tree is doing great. We planted it from a whip (I think it's called), a little $13 twig from Costco, last year, did the watering schedule, it grew the first year a bit. We have clay for soil. Not clay soil, no, just clay, like you could dig out a block, sculpt it, fire it in a kiln and have a flower pot, that level of clay. So we dug out 2 and 1/2 times the root ball, and added some topsoil, and we were sure to dig deep, which was very difficult with just a maddox, as the hole had to get wider to get deeper. But we did it. Then we followed the watering schedule, and then had a pretty cold winter, a few feet of snow at one point. We didn't know if our tree had rooted deeply enough to get below the frost line in the soil. But this spring, it flowered like crazy, and really it's still just a twig, well a Y shaped twig, but it flowered all over the "tree", up the trunk, up the two limbs. And it appears it was pollinated! We seem to have little cherries developing all over the tree. Our label on our tree said we needed a bing or some other cultivar to pollinate our tree (we read that after we bought it, and were bummed when we read it) but apparently there are other cherry trees in the area. So now we have a year old tree, it's a little twig, and it is covered in developing cherries. I can't wait until this tree is bigger, I think it will produce fruit like a champ! Now we just need to know how to prune this tree for our backyard. We've turned our backyard into a garden, so have rows all over where the grass used to be, and the cherry tree is in the middle of that. We don't want to shade the garden out too much, but it would be great if the cherry tree did give our veggies below a little relief from the sun. So we need to learn some pruning techniques, if anyone has suggestions for cherry tree pruning videos, or fruit tree videos in general, please post them. Thanks again, and follow the advice in this video and I don't think you can go wrong!
@ryanissa33534 жыл бұрын
Do you think your method of planting a cherry tree in clay soil will work for other trees such as avocados or lemons? Like you, all I have is just straight up clay with less than an inch of topsoil. But people said that digging out the clay and replacing it with rich topsoil can create a well at the bottom and a wet feet environment for trees. I just wanted to know if it worked for you since other people have said it hasn't worked for them in the long term.
@Yoyocreative6 ай бұрын
That's incredible! I'm happy your cherry tree is doing great! I hope you've had an abundance of cherries over these last three years! (Since you posted your comment 😊)
@IsraelQuezada9997 жыл бұрын
I'm from México and I just moved to Madison, Wisconsin. We don't have cherry trees where we lived in México because it's a very hot and tropical place. I saw lots of cherry trees in bloom here and they look beautiful. I'd like to plant some cherry trees and your video really helped me a lot, thank you!
@danicastillo7743 Жыл бұрын
You can have jacaranda trees, messy after blooming and with no fruit but beautiful
@brianbenson6377 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for the great information, I have no idea why anyone would give you a thumbs down on this video… I really do appreciate the video and the time you took to make sure this got produced and made available. God bless
@pjj94912 жыл бұрын
Trolls always thumbsdown...ignore and dont feed the trolls...👌
@aranelangel7 жыл бұрын
I have a thirteen year old cherry tree that has never produced a single cherry - not for lack of trying on either of our parts, though mine was assistance related solely. It's still an absolutely beautiful tree, and any tree is a wonderful thing to have. It fits in with all the maples well. They hang out in green all summer long and winter together. It's an absolute delight in the spring.
@hello2uday7 жыл бұрын
aranelangel A single cherry Tree will never produce fruits and you need need to have another cherry Tree within 50 meters distance. You could plant a 4 in 1 cherries Tree which will support cross pollination by itself.
@quantumtimelines2846 Жыл бұрын
I was going to say you need another cherry tree for pollination.
@caroljones5104 Жыл бұрын
I was told mine is self pollinating. I got 3 very lovely cherries from my tree last year. Hope I get more this year.
@jafarchowdhury45862 жыл бұрын
We just bought a cherry plant and a pears plant from Costco and are about to plant the tree in our backyard. Thank you for detailed information. The information is very helpful.
@carriekassick73113 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this! I just received my cherry tree from a nursery in Ga and it was not supposed to be delivered until the ground thaw in zone 4, but it was sent and looks like a 4 ft stick! I’m very disappointed but put it into a pot until I can plant it and now I’m concerned for its health and growth. It’s my first fruit tree so this video really helps, I just need to get it into the ground asap when it thaws. You always make it look easy. 💞
@karlsfoodforestgarden69633 жыл бұрын
Hi Carrie. It's not a problem that it looks like a stick. I've planted many dormant trees and they often look like that. I hope you did get it into the ground as soon as it thawed, but I also hope that you let it remain cool and dormant, otherwise the buds may have been damaged. Is it doing OK?
@carriekassick73113 жыл бұрын
@@karlsfoodforestgarden6963 Hi Karl, thank you for responding! Im happy to say my cherry tree is doing really well, it has several branches at this point and is completely covered in leaves. The coolest thing is that even though I won’t get cherries for a few years, it has little red dots on all the branches. ?future cherries, don’t know but I’m happy that it looks very healthy. 👍🏼
@karlsfoodforestgarden69633 жыл бұрын
@@carriekassick7311 Excellent! So glad it's doing well! Enjoy!
@jeanettecastle7916 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the wonderful information you provided about cherry trees.I have eight fruit trees in the same area. They all do well except for this one particular tree. It didn't produce leaves or come back to life in any way by the second spring. It's just this one spot doesn't seem to keep a cherry tree alive for more than one year. I have planted three cherry trees in this spot that did the same thing. Die by second spring. I do have another cherry that has done well. It's pretty much perfect. I planted two cherry trees about ten years ago. I am going to follow your advice. I am so hoping I can get this tree to grow. They ain't cheap! And, I really would love to keep it alive.
@valerie751047 жыл бұрын
I feel like I'm going to school and actually retaining the information you're a wonderful teacher!! thank you Luke for your time put into these videos
@MIgardener7 жыл бұрын
Thank you Valerie! That means a lot to hear that.
@newsviewstoday56897 жыл бұрын
Its so very true ~ I concure....very good clear pertinent instruction. Thank you from a Canadian in Australia's Great Dividing Range.
@sgabraki237 жыл бұрын
Valerie love
@blueirisgraphicswebdesign86867 жыл бұрын
Me too! My husband and I are harvesting a huge garden and have learned so many tips from you!!! We are huge fans (and eager students) Love your approach & your style !
@t.m.squirrel36027 жыл бұрын
yes , he makes the information really retainable.
@PortugueseGirl27 Жыл бұрын
I live in Portugal here we are zona 10 a and 10 b and we got amazing cherries 🍒 deep inside in the mountains.
@nikicollins5809 Жыл бұрын
CA is mild and temperate but it varies greatly in weather. My area is actually known for cherries, people come by the bus loads every spring to pick and buy cherries that grow in my area. So it really just depends on the area. I’m here to learn how to grow one in my yard instead of dumping my entire bank acct in spring to my local growers lol and then I hear that part he said about them not growing well in CA. Perhaps not in southern CA but Northern CA is covered in cherry trees
@erikafinlay1213 Жыл бұрын
Also in Sacramento my friend as lovely tree
@danicastillo7743 Жыл бұрын
And nuts!!! Almonds, cherries and peaches are common in my area, hope that tree grows healthy and sweet!
@HippyCheez11 Жыл бұрын
I’m in the So Cal High desert and I grow cherries 🍒. If you just plant anything in the ground yea might be rough but if you amend the soil and use hay or mulch you can just about grow anything decently 🔥🍒🌻🤠
@sreykimsear4 жыл бұрын
I just ordered Rainier Cherry and Bing Cherry trees. Thank you so much for your guidance. I will be getting the Trifecta fertilizer. My girls love cherries. I am in zone 7A.
@moriahs4202 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing! I recently bought a Lapins cherry tree!
@Johnlugard10 ай бұрын
Like seriously
@thelittlesignpost3 жыл бұрын
I guess my investment in cherry trees here in North Thailand may not have great success since it is warm to hot most of the year. We may get cold for about 1 month in and around January and down to 12 deg Centigrade, never freezing. But hey, I am ready to try and see what I can do. I was told strawberries were a no go here, but I turned 5 plants into 600 new plants with some shade, so there's a chance! I used load of EM to bring them on fast and they produced many baby plants! Cherries are a different ball game! It will make me cheery if my cherries grow!
@dougschnell747611 ай бұрын
I have had a single cherry tree for 6 years. It was a 4 year old tree when planted. It never had a blossom... This spring I planted two more cherry trees nearby. Within 2 weeks the older tree blossomed!!
@normarice12484 жыл бұрын
I’m obsessed with cherries so when they are in season I get them all the time. When we moved into our house I started throwing the seeds out the window on the side of the house just to decompose nationally and I now have a cherry tree lol
@cygnus19654 жыл бұрын
How Old is it? Do you get any fruit fro Not yet?
@cygnus19654 жыл бұрын
How old is it? Do you get fruit from it,
@noriakikakyoin44544 жыл бұрын
This does put a smile on my face.
@maijah73194 жыл бұрын
rero rero rero rero
@kristinanoall5 жыл бұрын
You’re so knowledgeable! Did you go to school for all of this, or acquire it through personal experience? I grew up with a cherry 🍒 tree in my backyard, and used to secretly have cherries for dinner when I refused to eat my veggies and got sent from the table...now I want to plant my own tree so my kids can carry on the tradition 😁
@Johnlugard10 ай бұрын
Thank you for your expert information your talented is wonderful to have teach us God richly blessed you
@Mrs_Homemaker3 жыл бұрын
We are about to plant a Crimson Passion tree/shrub. Hardy to zone 2!! So excited to watch it grow.
@Johnlugard10 ай бұрын
Thank you for your expert information your talented is wonderful to have teach us God richly blessed you
@steverobbins46657 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you posted this video today. I just planted my first cherry tree and am excited to take care of it and watch it grow and yield fruit. I also planted a peach tree and feel bit overwhelmed how to prune it properly. Looking forward to the other videos!
@doomslayer15 Жыл бұрын
This was a very educational video. I appreciate these
@AAHomeGardening3 жыл бұрын
I have three lovely cherry tree, cannot wait for Spring
@Theseus9-cl7ol10 ай бұрын
You give some good info, thank you. Planning on growing some this next Spring.
@grandmananners7 жыл бұрын
Love cherries! We have 5 bushes, 3 different kinds, we get at least 100 lbs od cherries per year
@newsviewstoday56897 жыл бұрын
+Linda Sanders ~ Hi Linda, why do you call them bushes? Cherries grow on TREES blueberries grow on bushes, red currents grow on bushes but its a Cherry Tree, now you have a new gardener below calling them Cherry Plants. CHERRY TREES guys. Get to know your garden better ladies . : )
@grandmananners7 жыл бұрын
Because here in Alberta, Canada in Zone 3-4 they only grow as a bush not a tree, and we therefore call them cherry bushes mine are about 10 years old and they are about 6 feet tall and the same width. I have seen pictures of them as an actual tree in California sort of areas, not happening up here. Edible Landscaping About Us Virtual TourWorkshopsNewsletterLinksPaper Catalog Buy Plants Berries BlackberriesBlueberriesCranberriesDogwoodsElderberriesGooseberriesJosta BerriesLingonberriesRaspberriesStrawberriesWintergreenBooks & Supplies BooksGift CardsGrowing AidsCactus CactusHerbs Fresh HerbsHopsMedicinal HerbsMushroom Log MiscellaneousNuts AlmondsChestnutChinquapinFilbertsGinkgoPecansPinesWalnutsShrubs BlueberriesChe, SeedlessCherries, BushCherries, SurinamCurrantsDogwoodsElderberriesMiscellaneousFeijoaFigsFlowersGoji BerriesGoumiHoneysuckle (bush)Josta BerriesJuneberriesPomegranatesQuinceTree Fruits ApplesApricotsChe, SeedlessCherries, SourCherries, SweetDogwoodsJujubesMedlarsMulberriesOlivesPawpawsPeachesPears, AsianPears, EuropeanPersimmon, AmericanPersimmon, AsianPlumsTropicals & Citrus BananaCherries, SurinamCitrusCoffeeGuavaPineappleVegetable AsparagusMiscellaneousGroundnutsRhubarbVines FlowersGrapesKiwis - FuzzyKiwis - HardyKiwis - RussianPlants On Sale Zone, Pot & Shipping Info View Full Cart Facebook Advanced Carmine Jewel Bush CherryPrunus cerasus x P. fruiticosaCarmine Jewel is part of a group of the best tasting bush cherries. The dark red, almost black fruits are sweet with very high nutritional content of super food status. Carmine Jewel is adaptable, low maintenance with high pest resistance. Height 6-8' tall. Originally from Dr. Les Kerr in Canada and the U of Saskatchewan. Carmine Jewel is a cross of Prunus cerasus (sour cherry) and Prunus fruiticosa (dwarf ground cherry). Introduced in 1999, it is a new addition to a list of top edible landscape plants. Very hardy, Zone 2-7 Plant Characteristics Pest ResistanceExcellentDisease ResistanceExcellentHeat ToleranceGoodHumidity ToleranceGoodSun ToleranceVery GoodWet Soil TolerancePoorNo SprayExcellentFresh for KidsExcellentThornsNoPlant TypeShrubSoil TypeAdaptableEdible TypeFruitSelf FertileYes This information is accurate to the best of our knowledge, comments/opinions are always welcome Due to import restrictions we are unable to ship Carmine Jewel Bush Cherry to CA...Click Here for the Carmine Jewel Bush Cherry Careguide Sorry, we are currently out of this item, please check back! Sign up to receive special offers and sale information before it goes on the website, so you can buy before we sell out! Email: View Full Cart
@newsviewstoday56897 жыл бұрын
I have been informed that in parts of the world cherry trees grow as bushes so I stand corrected! Thanks for the further education! Learn something new every day. "My bad". ; )
@grandmananners7 жыл бұрын
You are welcome!
@brycedrexler54133 жыл бұрын
Only 100 pounds off 5 bushes!? That kinda sucks
@CafeLehn7 жыл бұрын
I found this extremely useful, as I am renovating a cottage in Sweden and am getting ready to think about plantings. Cherry trees are so lovely and I know there are varieties that are hardy for the area, but I have not seen any other trees that are cherry in the surrounding area. Will more than one cherry tree be required, or can a tree pollinate itself given the number of blooms and the existance of available insect pollinators?
@BigAlSparks6 жыл бұрын
I do believe Cherries are a great fruit tree for areas that are colder. However to correct you Cherries are absolutely just fine in CA, and zone 9 too. Bing, Royal Anne, Rainier, Stella, Van, and Back Tartarian, have all done quite well for me and my family for 70+ years. Also, while lots of sun is great yes, cherries do just a bit better with a slightly more shaded ground, or foliage dense backdrop, as they really benefit when their surrounding soil stays cooler. Compost to worm castings definitely the best and most gentle way to get them going where ever you start them.
@johnpalma72656 жыл бұрын
Big Al Sparks: you seem to know a thing or 2 about cherries, I'm near the great lakes somewhere between zones 5&6 I get cherries on my 2 trees but something eats them I don't see any birds around them nor any other obvious pests or disease, I just see the pits hanging on some of them where the cherries used to be, do you have any idea what the problem may be?
@jenwit56 Жыл бұрын
thank you ขอบคุณ
@CountrylivingMama7 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this video! I too, am learning a lot. I'm surprised but relieved to hear that I don't need a second cherry tree. I bought the last cherry tree my local nursery had last Fall. It's a Bing variety. The tag said to plant another variety and I've been stressing because I haven't done that yet! Now I guess I don't have to! Blessings from NE Texas!
@andernaut54284 жыл бұрын
After three years, how is your tree producing?
@liquidsnail7305 Жыл бұрын
Any updates after 5 years?
@jessiceeoriginal Жыл бұрын
I'm wondering if I should get a cherry tree. This helps a lot. Thanks.
@bmack77626 жыл бұрын
After watching your videos, it's a miracle that there are any wild fruit trees out there.
@diygardener45567 жыл бұрын
It's hard to tell for sure, but it looks like that cherry tree is planted below the scion graft. I'm assuming it's a grafted tree. Are my eyes getting that bad, or did some dirt cover the graft union? Definitely don't let your graft unions get covered, as your tree will supercede the rootstock, causing a major shift in tree size, fruit production, and even disease resistance in some cases. One other thing worth mentioning, that will help boost your trees overall health, that I think is definitely worth talking about, is mycorrizal associations, and while planting a young tree is the perfect time to establish that. Apples and cherries both have established symbiotic relationships with many types of fungus, but what better symbiotic one to have in your yard then morel mushrooms. Mycelium can grow much faster and more energy efficient than any plant root system, and essentially becomes a protection and extension of the trees/plants root system. The mycorrizal mycelium trades nutrients and water from the vast network it establishes, to the tree in exchanging for things like sugar. The fungi efficient ability to convert that little bit of sugar into a greater extension of growth than the tree could ever manage, means that sugar is well spent to create an extension of the trees root system and ability to funnel nutrients from 10 to the 100th time. Planting is the best time to inoculate your trees, but all that loose soil with compost blended in around the roots is also a great time. Find a reputable business like Fungi Perfect, and get a mycorrizal species that will not just benefit your particular variety of tree, but will also provide you with edible gourmet mushrooms, when they eventually fruit. Or if you know the compatible variety, you can just pick wild or buy them at the store; then I would recommend creating a spore slurry, by putting a mushroom past it's edible prime in a blender with unclorinated water, then blend. Add the blender slurry to a five gallon aerated bucket of unclorinated water that you would use for compost tea, adding a half cup of unsulfered molasses, two tablespoons of dry fluffy wood ash right out of the stove; then let set in the bucket under aeration for 24, before deluding down 1 part spore slurry to 10 parts unclorinated water. Your 5 gallons becomes 50, and you can go around dumping it on all your compatible trees, your yard, or anywhere you want to create that association and potentially find edible mushrooms. Enjoy!
@aboriginalblood25837 жыл бұрын
*yawn*
@kiwiwriter6 жыл бұрын
Am a mycologist/microbiologist. Get mushrooms in their prime for spores. The old ones have typically dropped their spores already. Always look for closest relatives (of plants) if exact host can't be found. Most of these organisms (fungi/plants) evolved together and as plants diversified fungi took on multiple hosts. Of course, there are fungi specialists just to mess with this rule that usually works. And um, reduce your molasses in that 'compost tea' to about 1 ml per gallon. Try a tiny bit of seaweed for the fungi instead. If Stamets advises otherwise, please point out which book I've got em all I'll have another look at all this. Good on you for being so enthusiastic and collecting great knowledge. You are well on the path to self sufficiency with a DIY attitude like that. Share the love, ignore the haters. Check out permaculture for loads of inspiration.
@garyt43945 жыл бұрын
The lack of paragraphs makes your comment impossible (for me) to read. Which is a pity as it began with some interesting points.
@xuyahfish Жыл бұрын
Where I live was farmland up until 30 yrs ago. Then they planted a ton of Beech and a few oak, there are few to no other kinds of trees. I don't know of any cherry, wild or choke in my area. (There aren't many houses & most do not have enough sun for fruit trees we cut down a # or beech) beech grow fast so they're all 3+ stories.
@azariaazaria30304 жыл бұрын
Omgoodness. I could kiss you right now! You just saved me money. I was just about to buy another cherry tree I didn't really want to help cross pollinate a cherry tree I just brought! Bless you!
@daynamason50477 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video. I just ordered my pomegranate tree today after seeing your Facebook post so I can't wait for that episode!
@user-uj6te3ir4v4 жыл бұрын
Excuse me I planted a cherry tree so easy what I did is take out the seeds and plant them anywhere and hoping it to grow and one day it grow i was so happy seeing tiny little cherry plant😄😄
@4everGrowin2 жыл бұрын
Definitely about to grow me a cherry tree 🍒
@clmierau7 жыл бұрын
Perfect timing! My husband and I want to add a cherry tree to our fruits in the yard but we were told that they are very finicky. Maybe with your advice it will work.
@Johnlugard10 ай бұрын
Thank you for your expert information your talented is wonderful to have teach us God richly blessed you
@khayre23 жыл бұрын
very beautiful village
@p-treegardening83662 жыл бұрын
Good info… thanks for sharing!!
@carolinaschierholz49876 жыл бұрын
Oh my God, you made pull out my notebook and take notes, excellent teacher, thanks for sharing!
@AndreaPaulson19746 жыл бұрын
I have a 103 year old, 2.5 story sweet pie cherry tree that nobody has taken care of. The tree produced so many cherry's that if they aren't constantly picked and raked that my yard starts to smell like fermentation. What would you suggest to make it more manageable and to keep the worms out of the fruit?
@yvonnepruett81652 жыл бұрын
F
@Johnlugard10 ай бұрын
Thank you for your expert information your talented is wonderful to have teach us God richly blessed you
@caseyd30433 жыл бұрын
So, so helpful! Thank you!
@tommyknockerparanormalinc7 жыл бұрын
LOVE IT! Just bought land and about to plant some trees and try AGAIN at growing from seed. Thank you so much for your time and giving all this important info.
@Johnlugard10 ай бұрын
Thank you for your expert information your talented is wonderful to have teach us God richly blessed you
@CherryFarmEurope3 жыл бұрын
Nicely explained :D
@zoltiberta16227 жыл бұрын
Chill hours are not temperature below freezing it is temp below 45 degrees!!!!
@matthewfarrell3174 жыл бұрын
Thank you, I was wondering that, where I live in Melb (Aus), we have many large cherry farms, and we never get below 0 here ever. But we do get lots of cold nights around the 4-8C range
@elliejeen3 жыл бұрын
This was great but I need to know how to care for a mature cherry tree that came w the house I bought. What do I fertilize with and how often (same as what you said in video?). I got very tiny and very few cherries last year.
@CherryFarmEurope3 жыл бұрын
Plant next to another self-fertilizing cherry.
@karlsfoodforestgarden69633 жыл бұрын
It really depends on the variety. I am going to assume you're talking about a sweet cherry, since sour cherries usually produce well no matter what. My suggestion is that you find a compatible variety (not the same variety) which should help boost your harvest with cross-pollination. If your tree is a sweet cherry, it's likely to be a Bing but could be a Rainier, or something else. I would plant a Black Tartarian nearby, since it is a likely cross-pollinator and there's less chance that that's what you already have. Also, if the cherries are small, it may be that your tree was not receiving enough rain. You may want to water it during dry spells. If the tree is mature and healthy, I wouldn't worry too much about fertilizing it until you have made the other improvements, but you could always get your soil tested to see if there is anything it is lacking.
@yvespoirier19497 жыл бұрын
I'm quite surprised by the advice about the hole depth and size that you give in this video. I've been told before to keep the depth of the hole to the height of the rootball. Many trees have been killed by sinking too low from the compaction of the new "good soil" rich in compost and organic matter. I've also been told before to dig two to three times the diameter of the rootball but I've been told not to add any amendment to the soil going back in the hole, with the exception of mycorrhizae, especially when in clay soil. Amendments should go on top of the soil, to be mixed in the top inch or so. The idea being the creating a bowlful of good soil in solid clay will lead to root bound problems down the road, as the roots will rather circle up than expand out in these conditions. Thank you for your videos.
@dyvrssound56534 жыл бұрын
Agreed. Some good info in his vids but some things are definitely misinformed. Same with the chill hours. Pretty basic stuff for someone with over half a mil subscribers
@brandonallen98532 жыл бұрын
I wish we could grow cherry trees here in my area of Texas. I absolutely love eating them. It doesn't get cold enough here.
@maryannk49993 жыл бұрын
Great information but I live in California , high desert area. We get very hot and cold weather . My cherry tree has produced quite a lot of cherries 🍒 the last two years. LA area might not be ideal for cherry trees but we have a few cherry tree farms.
@KittyKat-zd1yr6 жыл бұрын
I have two beautiful sweet red cherry trees. The leaves started to curl. I would trim the tree this year and fertilize it well. Missed all the fruits last year.
@brianhoppersr.36714 жыл бұрын
I bought a bunch cherry tree 8years ago.it blooms like crazy,but never set any fruit.not sure if I got fooled from the buyer,I bought a montmormency cherry tree this spring to cross pollinate it with.hopefully this will fix the problem and I won't have to cut the tree down
@heidimarchant54386 жыл бұрын
I'm in Wyoming, we definitely get more than 300 freeze hours, idk anyone that has a cherry tree, maybe were too high up and too cold for too long. We can grow crab apple and apple trees like crazy tho.
@growinglongisland7 жыл бұрын
I ordered bunch of fruit trees I plan on doing an espalier fence along the back of the property your fruit tree growing guides are going to come in handy!
@NMW805 жыл бұрын
Cherries are a good source of melatonin and other great nutrients! I hope I can grow them in my climate. Apparently I’m a zone 7 so I’m hoping they grow well.
@NMW805 жыл бұрын
I’m confused I just looked again and it’s saying on another site that I’m in zone 5 to 6
@karlsfoodforestgarden69633 жыл бұрын
Love the idea of the growing guides. Thanks for the heads up on similarities! 😉
@doppioinahat79244 жыл бұрын
Thanks
@mylife-ph6oj4 жыл бұрын
Love your vidio. Keep in toch
@juliemclaughlin54072 жыл бұрын
I noticed on the apple tree video, no one mentioned how thick the trunk should be before planting outside or when to plant outside or when the tree will bear fruit. Both videos need to tell what kind of soil is best for a sweet fruit. I heard that apple trees grow best in loam or sand, and yet, they are grown in rich soil in Wisconsin. Do we add potassium? a cup? two cups? annually? monthly? what about magnesium or sand or rocks? ??? How do you know if you have a 6 or 7 ph? Is there a test strip? Do you have a video for plums?
@tdubble736 жыл бұрын
Hi Luke. I really appreciate what you do here. I also appreciate the passion you put into it. I have an older cherry tree that hasn't produced a good batch in a while. I've pruned the branches that grow straight up. The tree gens brown rot. I've read about making a baking soda solution to try to get rid of it. I'm about to order some trifecta for my vegetable garden and was going to use a some in the tree. Any suggestions? Thank you
@pamirabezmen35636 жыл бұрын
Thanks for all this info, Luke! I am sitting here, taking notes on all of these growing guides. You are a wonderful teacher.
@Johnlugard10 ай бұрын
Thank youfor your expert information your talented is wonderful to have teach us God richly blessed you
@MontessoriforBabies3 жыл бұрын
I commented on the other video about this, but can you grow a cherry tree in a raised bed? In the other video about fruit tree mistakes you told us to never use compost to backfill - is it okay to do it in case of nutrient poor lawn soil?
@MontessoriforBabies3 жыл бұрын
And when I tried to dig my lawn, there are a lot of rocks and big roots from the cottonwoods about 30 meters away - and the hard, compacted clay soil just seems so hard to dig! Any tips?
@karlsfoodforestgarden69633 жыл бұрын
That's probably a fine idea. It might not be ideal, but it sounds like you have a tough spot there. He's got a lot of good suggestions but, personally, I wouldn't put compost right into the hole, as he suggests, since that tends to discourage roots from seeking nutrient elsewhere and can lead to a small, weak root system. Nutrient is best added to the top of the soil. If I were you, I would loosen a large area of soil with a pitchfork - as deep as possible. I would plant the tree into that space, leaving the graft well above the surface of the soil. I would then add 6 to 9 inches of aged, natural woodchip mulch in a wide circle around the base of the tree, making sure to leave the graft well above the level of the mulch. This will save on watering, make fertilization unnecessary, and will also improve the loosened soil underneath. The larger the space you can loosen and mulch, the better, but a 4 foot diameter is a good start. You should add mulch every couple of years, as the level of mulch drops, but you can stop bothering with it once the tree is well-established. Also, don't forget about finding a compatible tree to cross-pollinize - assuming you're talking about a sweet cherry. Although he has had good luck without cross-pollination, I have not. This good luck may be site-specific. 😉 Good luck!!!
@maryannholmgren30764 жыл бұрын
Everything I needed to know about cherry tree growing. I'm in So. Calif and yes this first yr for my tree Dwarf, it is just growing tall, pretty but not a blossom past Spring, thought because it was new..oh well.
@loolver52093 жыл бұрын
AWWWW! :(
@fishfingaz57634 ай бұрын
Where did u get ur tree
@maryannholmgren30764 ай бұрын
@@fishfingaz5763 Home Depot...2nd yr got lots of cherries, this yr a small bowl full. The birds went nuts this yr. The leaves are so big that it hides some of them so I can have some. Worth a try.There are many places to get them but I was there and so was the cherry dormant around fall/winter.Cheaper I think than a full tree thats at peak time in stores.
@fishfingaz57634 ай бұрын
@maryannholmgren3076 thank you for replying.!
@MrMikeProductionz4 жыл бұрын
I have a very large cherry tree in my backyard, and it really hasn’t received much care over the years. As the years passed, I feel like they’re producing less and less fruit. Last year, they didn’t produce any fruit even, I think it was an off year. There are a lot of dead branches which I just started to remove. Do you have any thoughts on what to do? Is removing those dead branches a good idea?
@morgang5922 жыл бұрын
Time to prune it. Prune in late fall or early spring I believe (double check).
@mj6253 жыл бұрын
I have a dumb question. You mention fertilizing the tree. How is this done? I'm used to fertilizing a lawn, not trees. Are talking about using spikes or granules? Is it necessary to drill into the ground to gain access to the rootball? Can you provide specifics?
@karlsfoodforestgarden69633 жыл бұрын
I have never bothered with fertilizer, myself, and my 18-year-old Bing cherry does just fine. It kind of depends on your region and your soil. The best source of information for this is your local extension service. They can tell you everything you need to know about your particular region.
@DaBalloonGuy674 жыл бұрын
I bought 2 cherry trees. Small dwarf Montmorency variety. How far apart should I plant them? How far down should I put the root ball? Some say they grow good in some part sandy soil. I have sand for balloon weights. All help is greatly appreciated.
@microwavemouse96527 жыл бұрын
We planted cherry trees from the pit (store-bought cherries), and we're trying to ID the variety to see what might be going on with some of them. They have giant scalloped leaves (bigger than my hand, look like a heart with serrated edges, very soft), and I haven't been able to find the same online. Any thoughts what variety they may be?
@scotttaylor59976 жыл бұрын
Growing trees from seed you never know what you are getting and most of the time it is a 5 year wait before the tree puts on any fruit. Let say you eat some Bing cherries and then planted them. You may not get just a Bing cherry tree. You will get a cross between a Bing and what it was pollinated with. A Bing is a sweet cherry and a Montmorency is a tart cherry and a cross between them could be sweet or tart. It could just taste like some thing you just would not put in your mouth. Most cherry trees are budded or grafted so you know what you are getting. I say have fun trying to plant your own seed. That is how new types of cherry trees come out by taking a chance that 5 years from now your cherries could taste like some thing you just stepped in that a dog left be hide. That is what the universities and the big growers do and some times they come up with a winner. the cash crop for big growers are from budded or grafted cherry trees.
@Johnlugard10 ай бұрын
Do you ever see cherries
@whitedwarf294 жыл бұрын
love the video, only thing is i would have wanted you to start from seed then go through maturity
@RPG00183 жыл бұрын
I was thinking about that too
@johnaverageman62492 жыл бұрын
I fairly certain starting from seed is not a great way to get the fruit you are looking for. Most nursery trees are clones from cuttings
@L21-x4g Жыл бұрын
Seeds… cut the seed out, put it on a damp paper towel, sprinkle with cinnamon, wrap it all in aluminum foil, refrigerate for 3 months and see what pops up! I did like 9 seeds and one is growing!
@alexiscantu595 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info, it is very useful for me. I'm from Mexico and now I hink I can grow some cherry trees due my weather conditions. I'll plant it between a peach and walnut tree. Hopefully it'll grow and produce plenty of fruit. :3
@jimclaire79964 жыл бұрын
WOW, GREAT INFORMATION. I wonder how long the tree will take until the tree can bear fruit. Thank you for sharing Luke. Your channel is a blessing.
@wrathofall4 жыл бұрын
Awesome info! Thank you!!!
@bleumiette6 жыл бұрын
One year In 2005 my dad ate a bag of cherrys the throw about 100 seeds out but they did not survive one at a time the trees were dying the squirrels were eating them and when my mom was weeding she pulled allot of them up but there was one in the bushes that mom/squirrels couldn't reach it grew and grew and just this year-2018 it blossomed me and my dad couldn't believe it it has been 2005 plus 13 years is 2018 so it's 13 years old now can't believe it !
@brianady83676 жыл бұрын
LetMeWeirdItOut Studios
@bmack77626 жыл бұрын
So it goes to show you don't have to do anything to get a tree to grow and Blossom
@sunnygirl66456 жыл бұрын
Now make sure it gets regular fertilizing.
@rashmis.95243 жыл бұрын
Trees in front of my house are going to be cut for developmental purpose. Can I insert its branches in soil? Will it grow? Trees are huge and it includes: Mango, peepal,neem, drumstick.
@ronalea053 жыл бұрын
I live in Michigan and got a cherry tree last year and it's already has cherries on it should I take the cherries off and wait for a couple more years or what should I do
@karlsfoodforestgarden69633 жыл бұрын
You will get more growth if you remove them, but it kind of depends on the situation. Assuming the tree is growing aggressively and healthfully, cherries are a good sign. If, however, the tree has been exhibiting any signs of stress, definitely remove the fruit and try to figure out what's causing the stress (pests? lack of water? damage from bumping it with the lawn mower?). I once had a cherry tree that suddenly started producing tons of fruit and, just as suddenly, died. So I speculate that unusual fruiting may be caused by stress response. In other words, take a good look and make sure all is good! 😉
@robertchester28017 жыл бұрын
New to gardening and love the way you teach. Good info! I will be doing a cherry and already have a fig. Would li K e to hear you talk about fig trees sometime.
@chaelao.43214 жыл бұрын
Since wasps have their babies in figs have you had a lot of problems with more wasps being in your yard?
@karlsfoodforestgarden69633 жыл бұрын
@@chaelao.4321 It kind of depends on the fig tree. For example, the Chicago Hardy Fig is self-fruitful and doesn't require fig wasps. That's the kind of fig tree that I have. Also, while some wasps can be a nuisance, others are very helpful for pollinating fruit and eliminating garden pests. Many of them actually feed on common pests, so it's not so bad to have some wasps around. In general, if you leave a wasp alone it shouldn't bother you. But there is always the chance that you will startle it, or threaten its nest, so I understand why people are cautious about them. I remove wasp nests when they appear in the wrong spots but, on the whole, I welcome them into my garden. 😉
@AwesomeK2856 жыл бұрын
Hi Luke thanks for the video. I’m about to plant 2 new dwarf cherry trees and blueberries in containers. Should I add peat moss in both plants to lower to the desired ph? If so how much peat moss I should add, and does it need to apply annually? Thanks so much
@khunlavil36004 жыл бұрын
Such a useful video
@AstroGray6 жыл бұрын
Could you update the progress on these fruit trees? Thanks.
@ElinWinblad5 жыл бұрын
Grayson Hammon yes please
@brightonmusic5 жыл бұрын
Why is the tree planted so close to a building?
@scottvan18985 жыл бұрын
brightonmusic will chop down couple years later.
@alicealfons90235 жыл бұрын
@@scottvan1898 Better be honest about it later.
@motopaap5 жыл бұрын
He did mention it is dwarf kind, meant for yard. :)
@thchronicmessiah15674 жыл бұрын
Cherry trees don't grow overly large and that building doesn't have a foundation by the looks of things, so the roots of the tree wont be effected by a foundation. Cherries also grow taller rather than growing out like a bush, the structure also looks like a shed that can most likely be moved if need be. Matter of fact, that concrete pad behind the tree is probably the home for the sheds structure.
@SevensSecret3 жыл бұрын
8:40
@PinkChucky157 жыл бұрын
Great guide! Cherries are some of my favorite fruits :-)
@Johnlugard10 ай бұрын
Do you ever see cherries
@WebSurfingIsMyPastime Жыл бұрын
What's that cherry tree looking like today? Have you done any update videos on it? Probably not...cuz you can't have just one cherry tree and rely on your 'enviornment' to provide random cherry fertilizing trees. Probably ended up with no cherries since you didn't plant a companion tree.
@pjj94912 жыл бұрын
Do you need to score the seeds if you try and plant from seed?
@muhammedzuhair28634 жыл бұрын
Great..thanks
@benjaminvela38428 ай бұрын
For those first few weeks of watering, should I ph the water 6?
@LindaCasey7 жыл бұрын
I'm about to care for my 7 year old cherry tree after pruning it. My 'gardener-handyman' said that the roots need air. I saw a video of a lady boring holes in the ground around the tree and spouting water into them, aerating the soil. I bought some fruit tree food, but don't know how much I should apply since I have never fed the poor thing. Should I replenish the soil? How often? How much water? A gallon a week? Please, please, please answer me. Thank you (ps. I live in the Netherlands, zone 8b)
@shokoufehrahbar19617 жыл бұрын
Can you also talk about the insects and pest control for cherry trees? Thanks
@sanjeevmishraca4 жыл бұрын
Hello Luke, I planted a young cherry tree last spring (2019). This spring (2020) it flowered and now i can see green cherries on the tree. Q1: Do i remove the wilted flowers that are on the branches. Q2: Should i fertilize and if yes which fertilizer should I use? I live in Seattle. Thanks a lot!
@cal3b8034 жыл бұрын
The flowers will fall on their own. And if they are budding and about to set fruit a fertilizer that is well balanced.
@zachmccarty75435 жыл бұрын
hey luke, i live in rochester hills michigan near you. is it too late to plant a cherry tree around this week or so? would it survive michigan winter thank you if you can get back to me
@Bigdoni91 Жыл бұрын
I’m looking to grow a bing cherry tree variety. It states on the tag that it needs pollination. Since you mentioned it’s not actually necessary, do you think I will be okay planting it on its own?
@prakh12505 жыл бұрын
One use of cherries: Use the seeds as a weapon against your siblings.
@rezamohebbi72624 жыл бұрын
The most useless video ever .
@hannahkoskovich86203 жыл бұрын
Do I need to cut the flowers off the first year?
@karlsfoodforestgarden69633 жыл бұрын
Removing the flowers in the first year will allow the tree to focus on establishing its roots and growing lots of leaves. I would definitely remove them - though it's a little late now... 😉
@JuniperJennifer6663 жыл бұрын
Thanks, i planted 2 cherries today, all wrong according to u, i will redo tomorrow
@mylife-ph6oj4 жыл бұрын
Keep making more vidios
@Danny_Does_Drawings7 жыл бұрын
Bought a cherry tree that had tasty looking fruit on the tag. Turned out to be a sour cherry, lol.
@rahanonwarzone74573 жыл бұрын
Same here 😭
@karlsfoodforestgarden69633 жыл бұрын
This is not a total loss. Sour cherries are great for baking (where you add sugar) and making jellies. I like them fresh, but not everyone does. Good luck!
@davidhughes47227 жыл бұрын
I recently purchased a Barbados Cherry tree which is supposed to not like chill. Have you heard of this kind? I live in Houston and only get below freezing for a few hours a year. Hope it puts out some fruit.
@souzou10003 жыл бұрын
So year 2 and up what kind of fertilizer u recommend? And the phosphorus we only apply it in the fall? Please clarify thank you
@blueskyeranch64957 жыл бұрын
Great video Luke. I have 2 cherries to plant and this taught me everything I needed to know. Hope it works here in zone 8a
@Johnlugard10 ай бұрын
Thank you for your expert information your talented is wonderful to have teach us God richly blessed youThank youfor your expert information your talented is wonderful to have teach us God richly blessed you