Cherry trees from pits?
Anyone know about growing these? I have about 50 pits, and space to plant
them, but haven't ever tried it before and want to have a good shot at success. Thanks for any tips! |
Cherry trees from pits?
The pits need to be kept cool for a while before they will sprout. I'm
not sure about the specifics. Once you have invested a few years into it, you will probably get cherries (assuming you have enough trees that are sufficiently unrelated to successfully cross-pollinate). They will not be the same kind of cherries that the pits came from, however. They may or may not be what you want. Most cherries are reproduced vegetatively (cloned). Ray "Pat" wrote in message ... Anyone know about growing these? I have about 50 pits, and space to plant them, but haven't ever tried it before and want to have a good shot at success. Thanks for any tips! |
Cherry trees from pits?
Hi Pat,
Your idea is really the pits. Don't expect your planted seedling to produce cheeries like the original ones on the tree. You will probably wind up with some bad tasting fruit with some mixture of the tree's recessive genes and possibly something from a neighbor's who knows what. Get some proper cherry rootstock and graft the cherry of your choice on to it. Who wants to nuture a tree for 10 years only to find out it came out a bummer. Sherwin Dubren Pat wrote: Anyone know about growing these? I have about 50 pits, and space to plant them, but haven't ever tried it before and want to have a good shot at success. Thanks for any tips! |
Cherry trees from pits?
On Sat, 27 Mar 2004 22:14:12 -0600, "Pat"
wrote: Anyone know about growing these? I have about 50 pits, and space to plant them, but haven't ever tried it before and want to have a good shot at success. Thanks for any tips! http://experts.about.com/q/733/3136158.htm |
Cherry trees from pits?
Frogleg wrote: On Sat, 27 Mar 2004 22:14:12 -0600, "Pat" wrote: Anyone know about growing these? I have about 50 pits, and space to plant them, but haven't ever tried it before and want to have a good shot at success. Thanks for any tips! http://experts.about.com/q/733/3136158.htm I see that the expert claims that most fruit trees are hybrids. |
Cherry trees from pits?
Sherwin Dubren wrote: ........Get some proper cherry rootstock and graft the cherry of your choice on to it. Who wants to nuture a tree for 10 years only to find out it came out a bummer. If I was wanting to play around with cherry seedlings, here is what I would probably do. I would plant those seeds (though I would have either planted them last fall or put them in the refrigerator with some moist peat mix for 2 months). I would let those seedlings grow for a couple of years then graft some or all of them to good varieties. ...but... I would place the graft high enough to be above a lower branch. I would leave that lower branch there until it, and the rest of the tree, flowers and fruits. That way, if one of the seedlings turned out to be that one in a million super fruit, it wouldn't be lost forever as a root stock. All just for fun. Steve |
Cherry trees from pits?
il Sun, 28 Mar 2004 09:38:18 -0500, Steve ha scritto:
If I was wanting to play around with cherry seedlings, here is what I would probably do. I would plant those seeds (though I would have either planted them last fall or put them in the refrigerator with some moist peat mix for 2 months). I would let those seedlings grow for a couple of years then graft some or all of them to good varieties. ...but... I would place the graft high enough to be above a lower branch. I would leave that lower branch there until it, and the rest of the tree, flowers and fruits. That way, if one of the seedlings turned out to be that one in a million super fruit, it wouldn't be lost forever as a root stock. All just for fun. And for someone with lots of room. But a great idea. I've never done grafting. Is is hard to be successful? -- Cheers, Loki [ Brevity is the soul of wit. W.Shakespeare ] |
Cherry trees from pits?
Loki wrote: ...................... I've never done grafting. Is is hard to be successful? No, it's pretty easy. I, most often, just use the easiest of all grafts, the splice graft. I'll probably only do 3 or 4 grafts this spring but, almost certainly, they will all grow. It would be nice to have someone show you so you can see it with your own eyes but I'm sure you could find a site online that would show it clearly enough. Once you get the idea that you want the cambium of the scion make good contact with cambium on the under stock, you're about done. Use one method or other to keep the scion from drying out until it connects up with it's own supply of sap and it will grow. Oh, I suppose if I'm going to make that bold statement, I should add one more requirement. The under stock should be just starting its spring growth and the scion should have been collected earlier and refrigerated so it is still dormant. There, now it will grow. :-) I'll not get into bud grafting, which can be done later in the summer. Steve |
Cherry trees from pits?
il Sun, 28 Mar 2004 18:24:33 -0500, Steve ha scritto:
[snip] The under stock should be just starting its spring growth and the scion should have been collected earlier and refrigerated so it is still dormant. There, now it will grow. :-) I'll not get into bud grafting, which can be done later in the summer. Steve Oh, so autumn is NOT the time to start practising. Pity. I was inspired to try. I have books that show it, but I always thought I'd have to be ultra clean and careful. I'm more the "chuck it in the ground and see what happens" type of person. -- Cheers, Loki [ Brevity is the soul of wit. W.Shakespeare ] |
Cherry trees from pits?
On Sun, 28 Mar 2004 09:24:18 -0500, Steve wrote:
Frogleg wrote: On Sat, 27 Mar 2004 22:14:12 -0600, "Pat" wrote: Anyone know about growing these? I have about 50 pits, and space to plant them, but haven't ever tried it before and want to have a good shot at success. http://experts.about.com/q/733/3136158.htm I see that the expert claims that most fruit trees are hybrids. And? The point is that you don't get the same cherry tree as the one you plant the pit of.. Most fruit trees are propagated vegetatively for this reason. |
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