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i asked my mum this yesterday. she said the tree would proberly grow but woulnt have anythig on it. i live in scotland you see. is it a bush or a tree aswell. i really jsut wana know would one grow in my garden?

2007-05-28 04:53:27 · 8 answers · asked by ? 2 in Food & Drink Other - Food & Drink

8 answers

Yes, it would grow. It would take from 7-8 years for the TREE to reach maturity, and with proper fertilization, it would grow cherries!

2007-05-28 04:56:52 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

It may grow, but would take a lot of time before it was ready to flower and fruit. Planting a small tree would be better. You may need 2 trees as many fruits can not self pollinate. It can grow into a large tree. Many cherry farms are now using dwarf trees to facilitate picking. The growing season in Scotland may be too short.

2007-05-28 04:57:54 · answer #2 · answered by science teacher 7 · 1 1

you may desire to purchase a tree from a nursery, because of the fact maximum cherries and different fruit trees are hybrids and maximum of them are grafted. you're able to get a seed to germinate, even yet it is going to possibly not produce any fruit or a similar fruit from the cherry it got here from. additionally, maximum cherries want a pass-pollinator, so which you will not get cherries from a single tree. you like 2-3 trees a minimum of, of categories. playstation - I strengthen cherries in my outdoor and that they do nice--I certainly have 3 trees. The rootstock used at present makes it a danger to have smaller trees (known of 15 ft), that's "potential" for the domicile gardener. you may desire to easily pass to a solid nursery to get solid inventory and hear their advice. at present's gardening "technologies" has gotten extra helpful and that's now a danger for domicile gardeners to strengthen plant life and trees formerly left to the pros and mass manufacturers.

2016-10-09 00:04:10 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

eventually, but it would take a long long time,
it would be easier to go to a nursury or any place that sell plants and buy a small cherry tree.
btw becareful birds love cherrys when they are nice and ripe so keep an eye on it

2007-05-28 04:57:57 · answer #4 · answered by Alex G 2 · 0 1

i'm not sure if it would grow outside in scotland. maybe try to grow it inside

2007-05-28 04:56:31 · answer #5 · answered by lost.amber 5 · 1 0

Try it. It might grow. But put it in a pot at first and if it gets bigger then you can plant it in the ground.

2007-05-28 05:03:56 · answer #6 · answered by crazy_cat_lady 4 · 0 1

Nope, that seed is not fertilized.

2007-05-28 05:01:21 · answer #7 · answered by BlueSea 7 · 0 1

go for it. it will take a long time however.

2007-05-28 04:58:05 · answer #8 · answered by cadaholic 7 · 1 1

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