Cherries in North Dakota
Only sour (tart) cherries are hardy in North Dakota. Some of the best were developed at University of Saskatchewan-Saskatoon over the course of 50 years. These are Dwarf Hardy Shrub Cherries, aka the Romance Series, with the names: Carmine Jewel, Crimson Passion, Romeo, Juliet, Valentine and Cupid. There is also one extra variety in the US: Wowza!.
These cherries are hardy to USDA growing zone 2 – colder than North Dakota. The plants only grow to approximately 7 feet tall by 7 feet wide. They are each self-fruitful, meaning that just one plant will produce fruit. Some of the varieties sucker profusely, some not very much.
In the past, CREC has grown Carmine Jewel (productive, suckering, mid-season), Crimson Passion (shy bearing, few suckers, mid-season) and an unrelated tree: Evans/Bali (productive+, some suckers, late season). Due to SWD challenges, these were all removed. After a few years, Romeo and Juliet began to bear fruit. Romeo has been a disappointment here: very few fruits, late season, but few suckers. Juliet has been a star. It fruits early, so you have a chance to outwit the SWD, it’s quite productive, but it suckers a lot. The fruit is more tender than the other Romance Series cherries, but it is very nice. I’ve enjoyed several pies from Juliet fruit!
USask 'Juliet' Yield (5 plants)
Harvest Date | Yield |
---|---|
2020 (July 13) | 41 pounds |
2021 (July 16) | 73.8 pounds |
2022 (July 19) | 19.2 pounds |
2023 (July 11) | 98.9 pounds |
There are University of Saskatchewan cherries available in the US now that we have not grown: Valentine, Cupid and Wowza! are from the original release of this group. There are more recent releases, too: D’Artagnan, Sweet Thing and Cutie Pie. All would be worth a try!
I hope you find all you are looking for in the seed and plant catalogs this winter.
Kathy Wiederholt
Kathy.Wiederholt@ndsu.edu
Fruit Project Manager