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#1
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Growing cherries from stones
Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would
be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? We have an unheated greenhouse, if that helps. -- Sally in Shropshire, UK bed and breakfast near Ludlow: http://www.stonybrook-ludlow.co.uk Reply To address is spam trap |
#2
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Growing cherries from stones
Just lay them in your compost pile and cover them up with compost. Next
year some should come up as trees and you transplant them in the spring. They will probably not be the same cherries as you bought, but they will be edible. Dwayne "Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? We have an unheated greenhouse, if that helps. -- Sally in Shropshire, UK bed and breakfast near Ludlow: http://www.stonybrook-ludlow.co.uk Reply To address is spam trap |
#3
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Growing cherries from stones
Just lay them in your compost pile and cover them up with compost. Next
year some should come up as trees and you transplant them in the spring. They will probably not be the same cherries as you bought, but they will be edible. Dwayne "Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? We have an unheated greenhouse, if that helps. -- Sally in Shropshire, UK bed and breakfast near Ludlow: http://www.stonybrook-ludlow.co.uk Reply To address is spam trap |
#4
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Growing cherries from stones
On Thu, 29 Jul 2004 13:51:11 -0500, "Dwayne" wrote:
"Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? We have an unheated greenhouse, if that helps. Just lay them in your compost pile and cover them up with compost. Next year some should come up as trees and you transplant them in the spring. They will probably not be the same cherries as you bought, but they will be edible. OK, thanks Dwayne. I hadn't thought of putting them in the compost heap. Won't it get too hot? -- Sally in Shropshire, UK bed and breakfast near Ludlow: http://www.stonybrook-ludlow.co.uk Reply To address is spam trap |
#5
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Growing cherries from stones
On Thu, 29 Jul 2004 13:51:11 -0500, "Dwayne" wrote:
"Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? We have an unheated greenhouse, if that helps. Just lay them in your compost pile and cover them up with compost. Next year some should come up as trees and you transplant them in the spring. They will probably not be the same cherries as you bought, but they will be edible. OK, thanks Dwayne. I hadn't thought of putting them in the compost heap. Won't it get too hot? -- Sally in Shropshire, UK bed and breakfast near Ludlow: http://www.stonybrook-ludlow.co.uk Reply To address is spam trap |
#6
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Growing cherries from stones
On Thu, 29 Jul 2004 13:51:11 -0500, "Dwayne" wrote:
"Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? We have an unheated greenhouse, if that helps. Just lay them in your compost pile and cover them up with compost. Next year some should come up as trees and you transplant them in the spring. They will probably not be the same cherries as you bought, but they will be edible. OK, thanks Dwayne. I hadn't thought of putting them in the compost heap. Won't it get too hot? -- Sally in Shropshire, UK bed and breakfast near Ludlow: http://www.stonybrook-ludlow.co.uk Reply To address is spam trap |
#7
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Growing cherries from stones
I don't know what the trick is, but once our Pastor bought a bushel of
peaches, canned them and put the pits into the compost pile. He gave me about 20 trees the next year to plant and give away. After a few years we started getting peaches from the trees. They had reverted back to the type of tree that had been he root stock from the peaches he had bought, but that was nice. One tree would ripen and a week later the other one would. It gave us time to process the fruit rather than having it all at once. The fruit was very good. Dwayne "Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... On Thu, 29 Jul 2004 13:51:11 -0500, "Dwayne" wrote: "Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? We have an unheated greenhouse, if that helps. Just lay them in your compost pile and cover them up with compost. Next year some should come up as trees and you transplant them in the spring. They will probably not be the same cherries as you bought, but they will be edible. OK, thanks Dwayne. I hadn't thought of putting them in the compost heap. Won't it get too hot? -- Sally in Shropshire, UK bed and breakfast near Ludlow: http://www.stonybrook-ludlow.co.uk Reply To address is spam trap |
#8
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Growing cherries from stones
I don't know what the trick is, but once our Pastor bought a bushel of
peaches, canned them and put the pits into the compost pile. He gave me about 20 trees the next year to plant and give away. After a few years we started getting peaches from the trees. They had reverted back to the type of tree that had been he root stock from the peaches he had bought, but that was nice. One tree would ripen and a week later the other one would. It gave us time to process the fruit rather than having it all at once. The fruit was very good. Dwayne "Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... On Thu, 29 Jul 2004 13:51:11 -0500, "Dwayne" wrote: "Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? We have an unheated greenhouse, if that helps. Just lay them in your compost pile and cover them up with compost. Next year some should come up as trees and you transplant them in the spring. They will probably not be the same cherries as you bought, but they will be edible. OK, thanks Dwayne. I hadn't thought of putting them in the compost heap. Won't it get too hot? -- Sally in Shropshire, UK bed and breakfast near Ludlow: http://www.stonybrook-ludlow.co.uk Reply To address is spam trap |
#9
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Growing cherries from stones
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#11
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Growing cherries from stones
In article , Dwayne
writes I don't know what the trick is, but once our Pastor bought a bushel of peaches, canned them and put the pits into the compost pile. He gave me about 20 trees the next year to plant and give away. After a few years we started getting peaches from the trees. They had reverted back to the type of tree that had been he root stock from the peaches he had bought, but that was nice. The tree you got from the seed would quite probably not bear the same fruit as was planted, since you would get the variation inherent in any sexual reproduction, but there is no mechanism whereby the seed produced would give rise to the same type of tree as the rootstock except by coincidence - for example, pears are commonly grafted on to quince, but there's no way planting a pip from the pear would give a quince tree. btw - please don't top post - it messes up the threads in a ng like this one where the convention is to bottom post One tree would ripen and a week later the other one would. It gave us time to process the fruit rather than having it all at once. The fruit was very good. Dwayne "Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... On Thu, 29 Jul 2004 13:51:11 -0500, "Dwayne" wrote: "Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? We have an unheated greenhouse, if that helps. Just lay them in your compost pile and cover them up with compost. Next year some should come up as trees and you transplant them in the spring. They will probably not be the same cherries as you bought, but they will be edible. OK, thanks Dwayne. I hadn't thought of putting them in the compost heap. Won't it get too hot? -- Sally in Shropshire, UK bed and breakfast near Ludlow: http://www.stonybrook-ludlow.co.uk Reply To address is spam trap -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" |
#12
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Growing cherries from stones
In article , Dwayne
writes I don't know what the trick is, but once our Pastor bought a bushel of peaches, canned them and put the pits into the compost pile. He gave me about 20 trees the next year to plant and give away. After a few years we started getting peaches from the trees. They had reverted back to the type of tree that had been he root stock from the peaches he had bought, but that was nice. The tree you got from the seed would quite probably not bear the same fruit as was planted, since you would get the variation inherent in any sexual reproduction, but there is no mechanism whereby the seed produced would give rise to the same type of tree as the rootstock except by coincidence - for example, pears are commonly grafted on to quince, but there's no way planting a pip from the pear would give a quince tree. btw - please don't top post - it messes up the threads in a ng like this one where the convention is to bottom post One tree would ripen and a week later the other one would. It gave us time to process the fruit rather than having it all at once. The fruit was very good. Dwayne "Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... On Thu, 29 Jul 2004 13:51:11 -0500, "Dwayne" wrote: "Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? We have an unheated greenhouse, if that helps. Just lay them in your compost pile and cover them up with compost. Next year some should come up as trees and you transplant them in the spring. They will probably not be the same cherries as you bought, but they will be edible. OK, thanks Dwayne. I hadn't thought of putting them in the compost heap. Won't it get too hot? -- Sally in Shropshire, UK bed and breakfast near Ludlow: http://www.stonybrook-ludlow.co.uk Reply To address is spam trap -- Kay "Do not insult the crocodile until you have crossed the river" |
#13
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Growing cherries from stones
"Dwayne" wrote in message ...
"Sally Thompson" wrote in message ... Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? We have an unheated greenhouse, if that helps. Just lay them in your compost pile and cover them up with compost. Next year some should come up as trees and you transplant them in the spring. They will probably not be the same cherries as you bought, but they will be edible. (Posting order re-arranged.) But will they be fleshy enough to bother with? Wild cherries aren't, and that may be what you'll end up with. The reason I mention this is that while growing trees to fruiting maturity from pips is great fun, if you haven't got an acre or two of ground and ten years to spare, it's probably better simply to buy a tree of a recognized variety known to do well in your area. Peaches are noted for coming pretty well from seed; but I just don't know about cherries. I know all too well what it is to be desperate to do gardening and sometimes not have the money even for a packet of seed, and you can have wonderful fun within those limits*; but if twenty quid or so is there, and you want a fruit tree, it's the best way. You won't end up behind the rich guy if you can only put in one a year, and you may give your trees better love and care and so end up ahead of him. *(actually *more* fun, looking back, because of the sense of achievement -- those wildflower seeds and scrounged or nicked cuttings gave the best plants ever! Anybody who won't give a polite stranger a cutting or a few seeds is no gardener, so you should never be shy about asking.) Mike. |
#14
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Growing cherries from stones
"Pam Moore" wrote in message ... On Thu, 29 Jul 2004 17:29:46 GMT, (Sally Thompson) wrote: Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? I have a cherry that I grew from a pip about 20 years ago. It is still in a pot, roughly bonsai-ed, so not very big. It has fruited each year for some years now, and the fruit are tasty, though usually only about a dozen and the birds get them before I do. It is self fertile as there are no other cherry trees around. I have had peach stones germinate in the compost bin, but never cherries. You need to keep them protected from mice. I would sow them in a pot of sand, with wire mesh over, in the greenhouse and see what happens.... and be patient. Good luck As a child in South Africa, my parents had a house with a small orchard of peaches, plums and apricots. One of the chores by which I earned pocket money was to weed the orchard. The weeds were mostly peach and apricot seedlings from the pips we threw on the ground when feasting on the fruit from the trees. Another small town where I was at school was in a fruit growing district. Peaches and cherries had no local value, except at the railway station. Passengers would buy fruit at the station and eat it as the train drew out. The result was rows of peach and cherry trees on either side of the line, stretching for a few miles in both directions. The crop from that was enough for the needs of the townsfolk. Franz |
#15
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Growing cherries from stones
"Pam Moore" wrote in message ... On Thu, 29 Jul 2004 17:29:46 GMT, (Sally Thompson) wrote: Having just finished a yummy bag of cherries, I wondered if it would be possible to grow a cherry tree (or two) from the stones. Has anyone tried this with success? I have a cherry that I grew from a pip about 20 years ago. It is still in a pot, roughly bonsai-ed, so not very big. It has fruited each year for some years now, and the fruit are tasty, though usually only about a dozen and the birds get them before I do. It is self fertile as there are no other cherry trees around. I have had peach stones germinate in the compost bin, but never cherries. You need to keep them protected from mice. I would sow them in a pot of sand, with wire mesh over, in the greenhouse and see what happens.... and be patient. Good luck As a child in South Africa, my parents had a house with a small orchard of peaches, plums and apricots. One of the chores by which I earned pocket money was to weed the orchard. The weeds were mostly peach and apricot seedlings from the pips we threw on the ground when feasting on the fruit from the trees. Another small town where I was at school was in a fruit growing district. Peaches and cherries had no local value, except at the railway station. Passengers would buy fruit at the station and eat it as the train drew out. The result was rows of peach and cherry trees on either side of the line, stretching for a few miles in both directions. The crop from that was enough for the needs of the townsfolk. Franz |
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