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Growing cherry trees bursting with fruit | Growing fruit and veg | Gardening Australia



How to grow loads of cherries, keep the trees from getting too big, and encourage fruit growth rather than leafy growth.
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In Victoria’s Yarra Valley with a view of the Warramate Hills, 20,000 cherry trees are thriving. There are 38 different varieties that ripen at slightly different times, and Jane is here for picking time, which lasts from early November to late December.

Peter Foster has been a fruit grower all his working life and manages this 50-hectare property. As a commercial crop, they are known to be difficult to grow with too much rain causing the fruit to split. Cherry growers go to a lot of trouble to keep their cherries dry to prevent this water damage, even using helicopters to dry them off.

The cherries are picked by hand before moving to an automated sorting machine that washes the fruit and trims the stems. Cameras take 3 photos of each cherry to monitor colour, size and defects and they’re monitored by hand to ensure strict quality control. They are then packed into boxes, ready for sale.

Peter says the trees aren’t too thirsty, with a good drink once a week enough for the backyard cherry, and “you want it to stress a little bit to get the cherries on it… treat them a bit mean” as lots of water will produce lots of green growth but won’t encourage prolific fruiting. Chill factor is also important, with the trees requiring “700 hours of 8 degrees and lower” over winter to set fruit.

Cherry ‘Lapins’ is a good choice for the home gardener as it is self-pollinating, readily available, and easy to grow without a trellis in the right conditions. Peter recommends planting trees in July when they are dormant and giving a hard prune back to 5-centimetre-long branches to encourage shorter, bushier plants where you can reach the fruit.

In spring and autumn, they feed with pelletised chicken manure and cover the soil with tree prunings and straw mulch.

Featured Plants
Cherry ‘Lapins’ Prunus avium cv.

Filmed on Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung Country / Yarra Valley, Victoria
Jane Edmanson

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27 Comments

  1. Please help. I have couple of 20 years old cherry trees that have very low yield. They have a lot of flowers but most the little tiny fruits keep falling off every year. Can I use 0-0-60 Potassium with 10-10-10 fertilizer together with Calcium (eggshells), Bone meal and Epsom salt twice a year? Will this fix the problem?
    Many thanks & God bless,
    Hai

  2. Man, if I was picking I'd eat them all! As I did when raspberry picking as a kid in the school holidays, I ate all my profits!

  3. 5 years ago I lived in Lilydale 5 minutes away from there beautiful cherry trees I used to drive past them every morning I❤🍒🍒

  4. Hello friends and experts! I would like to ask how to choose the varieties of cherries in the northern regions of China? Any better rootstock recommendations?

  5. I live in Canada, I have two cherry about 8 years old, still no fruit or a few small only, but those tree close to a pine tree, is it a problem to a cherry tree? thanks, Felix

  6. At last I got someone that can help me with my cherry plant. (Stella). It's in a pot, it's growth is very vigorous and healthy. What month it will give us fruit. Should I prune after harvest. Plz do reply

  7. Can you please guide, do we have to prune our cherry tree in Melbourne every year In July and December or it’s just one time after planting

  8. I'm from Russia, I live in the Caucasus, in Ossetia.

    You are wonderful people, doing a wonderful job and living in a wonderful country. I am also a gardener and I have a peach. This year I want to plant cherries. Thank you for the video!

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