Prunus avium 'Van'
Cherry Tree 'Van'
Prunus is a genus of flowering and fruiting trees and shrubs, including cherries, peaches, plums, nectarines, apricots and almonds. They can be grown as trees, or trained as fans or espaliers against walls or fences. Some are self-fertile, and will bear fruit without a pollinating partner. Some varieties are grown just for their flowers, ('flowering', or 'ornamental' cherries), and others for their fruit. 'Van' is in pollination group 3, self-sterile and therefore needs a pollination partner that flowers at the same time to produce fruit. The fruit are red, sweet, medium-sized, and have a small stone in proportion to the flesh. The tree is susceptible to canker
Contributed by @Gini78
-
Full sun
-
Occasional watering
-
Full Frost Hardy: 5F (-15°C)
-
Light and free draining
Common name
Cherry Tree 'Van'
Latin name
Prunus avium 'Van'
type
Deciduous trees or shrubs
family
Rosaceae
ph
5.5 - 8.0 Acid - Neutral
Plant & bloom calendar
-
Best time to plant
-
When to harvest
full grown dimensions
Prunus avium 'Van'
Prunus is a genus of flowering and fruiting trees and shrubs, including cherries, peaches, plums, nectarines, apricots and almonds. They can be grown as trees, or trained as fans or espaliers against walls or fences. Some are self-fertile, and will bear fruit without a pollinating partner. Some varieties are grown just for their flowers, ('flowering', or 'ornamental' cherries), and others for their fruit. 'Van' is in pollination group 3, self-sterile and therefore needs a pollination partner that flowers at the same time to produce fruit. The fruit are red, sweet, medium-sized, and have a small stone in proportion to the flesh. The tree is susceptible to canker
Planting
From Early Spring TO Early Spring
Cherries prefer deep, fertile and well-drained soil with pH 6.5-6.7. They dislike shallow, sandy or badly drained soils. Acid cherries tolerate some shade and are suitable as fan-trained trees against north-facing walls or fences, or as open centred bush trees. Best planted in full sunlight.