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torontoontario

Cherry Seeds

torontoontario
17 years ago

I have tons of cherry seeds saved from our one tree.

My questions are:

1. If I keep these soaked in water, will they germinate?

2. What is the best time of year to plant them?

3. I have room for lots of trees and am wondering the best way to go about planting them.

Thank you in advance!!!

Comments (17)

  • ranjana
    17 years ago

    Hi,
    I am in the same boat as you are.I too have saved red and black cherry seeds but do not know the details about growing plants from them. I had bought plants last year which didn`t survive. so this year I sincerely hope someone who knows about growing plants from cherry seeds obliges.
    Thanks
    Ranjana

  • shrubs_n_bulbs
    17 years ago

    Most Prunus species require several months cold stratification, and often several months warm stratification before that. The pulp inhibits germination and must be removed completely, soaking is a good way to do this if you replace the water every few hours for a few days.

  • torontoontario
    Original Author
    17 years ago

    Thank you for the responses.

    One thing that I know is that these seeds will germinate. I know this because I have lots of volunteers from previous years.

    Do I need to keep the seeds in the fridge first to make them cold?

    Direct sew or into pots?

    I don't know how to graft. If someone could explain it to a newbie like me that would be appreciated.

    Thanks again.

  • brendan_of_bonsai
    17 years ago

    You need to keep em cold and wet for cold stratification, grafting is were you take a scion (branch) from a tree you want and graft it on to roots from a compatable tree, like a scion from a good tasting black cherry onto roots from a bad tasteing black cherry.

  • djf863000_yahoo_ca
    16 years ago

    Does it matter what season you plant them? obviously not in the winter, cause to ground is too hard to even dig. I wanna plant wild sweet cherries and black cherries. We are coming close to November, and now frost comes every few mornings or temperature close to it. I got the seeds now. Should I precede by putting them in a damp paper towel within a bag and then plant them in the middle on November? If not what are my options to wait for after winter? Can I put every seeds in one paper towel or should i separate them and have a bag for each seeds?

  • tigerj_yahoo_com
    12 years ago

    I've not yet managed to start cherries from pits, but I've learned a few things about how it's supposed to work. Stratification is key. It's a survival technique that trees in temperate climates have learned. If seeds grew without being chilled, chances are they would sprout in the fall and be killed by winter weather. Seeds are stratified by soaking them first, and then putting them in moist soil, keeping the temperature between freezing and 40 degrees farenheit. The length of time depends on the variety you're planting, but 2-3 months should be enough for most temperate plants. You can keep the seeds in a zip lock bag in the fridge with a little potting soil and water, or you can plant them in the fall and let mother nature do the stratifying. If you plant outside, just mark where you plant them. In the spring, if you've stratified them in the fridge, you can plant them in pots or in your yard. One caution: if you live where there is lot's of wildlife, some critters, like deer, like to munch on tender tree seedlings. You may want to provide some extra protection.

  • alhasasneh0587_yahoo_com
    12 years ago

    Hi, quick question, after keeping the seeds in soil in the fridge for about 8 weeks, are they supposed to sprout?
    or do you just go ahead and remove them from the fridge and plant them just as they were? or do you remove the seeds by its self and replant them in regular soil?. thanks

  • jam_may_gmail_com
    12 years ago

    Prunus avium L. (mazzard cherry) seeds grow with KNO_3 stimulation (_ = subscript).

    It seems other types like the pin cherry respond to environmental factors such as light, number of trees nearby, and nitrogenous stimulation. However, I could only find proof of the KNO_3 actually making a difference.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Improving germination of Prunus avium L. seeds by gibberellic acid, potassium nitrate and thiourea

  • boydrh
    12 years ago

    GA_3 (gibberellic acid) can be used to stimulate plant growth. I have taken cherry seeds from cherries I bought at the super-market, removed the pulp, cracked the external seed coat (usually requires a pair of tin-snips or a dremmel tool) and soaked in GA_3 for about 24 hours. If you google cherry seeds and GA_3 there is a research publication from a university in Turkey where they found the best results at 1250 ppm. If the concentration is too high or they are soaked for too long the seeds will germinate in about two days and grow too fast for the root structure to support. I have tried 24 hours at 1500 and 1250 ppm as well as 48 hours at 1000 ppm and 750 ppm. I have found the best results to be at 1000 ppm for 24 hours, then I put them in a JiffyStart (or similar) seedling tray. you're going to want to water them nearly every day to flush out as much of the GA_3 as possible to prevent it from growing too fast so i would recomment poking a hole in the bottom of the tray or propping the lid slightly so that it remains humid but not water-logged. On my most recent trial, I planted 36 seeds and 6 germinated within a week, two germinated the following week, and two sprouted the 3rd week but then rotted. One of the first to sprout grew too quickly for the root structure to support and wilted. Overall I would say it is a much more convienent way of germinating them than putting them in the fridge for 4 months, cupboard for 4 months, fridge, then planting them. GA_3 is available from ebay, amazon, etc... and almost always come with mixing instructions.

  • mccommas
    11 years ago

    torontoontario and ranjana

    How did you make out?

    I am trying it this year. I am going to just pop them outside.

    One thing I noticed while cleaning them. Most of them floated. I want to say that about 5 out of 33 sank.

    I am not interested in the fruit. I want flowering trees. Big real ones not runts from root stock.

  • fruit123
    11 years ago

    Step by step , how to grow cherry tree from seed.

    This post was edited by fruit123 on Thu, Feb 21, 13 at 12:18

  • Thomas9666
    9 years ago

    Hey, would removing the seed from the seed coat remove the need to 'winter' the seeds in a freezer? I've managed to get a seed out intact and was wondering...

    Thanks

  • roxanwright
    9 years ago

    I want to ask. What season is the best for planting cherry seeds?

  • mccommas
    9 years ago

    As far as I can tell, it doesn't matter. I have gotten zero luck and I have been trying for years.

    I put some outside last fall (again) and nothing so far has come up. I tried the wet paper towel thing and not one germinated and I did dozens of them. I will keep trying though!

  • alpine80220
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    Regarding cherry seeds that are not clean: would it be okay to put moist cherry seeds out whe near where ants are and let the ants clean them?... Which is what I'm guessing would have happened to them in nature anyway... Just wondering

  • skitdora
    8 years ago

    I have store cherries which I ate and saved the seeds from growing. I don't know if they will survive in my zones winter temperatures. I also saved my cherries that grew on my Carmine jewel cherry, as it's suppose to be a cold Hardy bush type. I cold stratified all cherry seeds in the fridge in a zipblock bag with a moist paper towel and boom on the 3 month mark they start to germinate. They continue to germinate for a couple of months. I never tried just soaking them in water. I believe setting the germinated seeds out in spring might work, but I have read many times that young trees should be grown in pots the first 2 years and sheltered in the winter. My Carmine jewel grew a super long tap root in its container so I do worry about how it will eventually do when transplanted to a final home. In warmer climates I think growing cherries from seeds would have less risk and greater success.