After years of nothing, our huge old cherry tree decided to fruit.

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Late bloomer!!! Nice 🤙

It’s probably about 60 years old, but we’ve only lived here for 4 years. Not sure what changed this year.

Awesome! Such a good feeling, too! 🤙🏼

1. Improper Pollination: Cherries, particularly sweet varieties, often need cross-pollination to fruit. If there is no suitable pollinator tree in proximity, or pollinating insects like bees are not present, the blossoms may not develop into fruit.

2. Pruning and Maintenance: Improper or insufficient pruning can affect fruiting. Pruning helps stimulate the growth of new fruit-bearing wood, controls the tree’s size, and lets sunlight reach the inner branches.

3. Biennial Bearing: Some fruit trees, including certain cherry varieties, may exhibit a pattern called biennial bearing, where they produce fruit heavily one year and minimally or not at all the next. This is a response to the stress of a heavy crop, which depletes the tree's resources.

Good to know! We’ve definitely got more pollinators this year, by design.

How do you use the fruit? We have some trees here and I’ve always struggle because the pit makes up so much of the space inside.

My plan for this first batch is to make a syrup out of it. Not even going to pit them, so we’ll see how it turns out!

Leaving them in? 🤯 Are you going to eat cherry pits?

😋😋😋😋