Tough Trees for Tough Climates
Edible Forest Nursery  

Sweet Cherry on MxM60 rootstock

3-5 ft- $18 ea
Please add 5 dollars per tree if ordering less than 3 trees. (total for order)
Black Gold Sweet Cherry
Self - fertile cSelf - fertile, cold hardy, frost tolerant, late blooming, high yielding, and resistant to cracking and canker. Large, firm, well flavored sweet cherries. Zone 5

WhiteGold®PPAF Sweet Cherry
Beautiful,large, sweet cherry with a
shiny red blush over yellow skin. Firm, clear yellow flesh which is very hard.
Completely self fertile, very winter hardy for a sweet cherry, zone 5, very productive and frost tolerant. Very tolerant of Cherry Leaf Spot.
Good crack resistant fruit and vigorous, high yielding tree.
Reliable pollenizer for other midseason
cherries. Z 5


Sour Cherry on mahaleb rootstock

3-5 ft- $18 ea
Please add 5 dollars per tree if ordering less than 3 trees (total for order)

Montmorency Sour Cherry

Sold out for 2009

The standard for pies, productive, hardy, reliable.Self fruitful (no pollinizer needed). Ripens late June. Height to 15 ft. Roots prefer good soil drainage. Does well in light soil. Zone 3.

Note: (Frank Foltz has said that it is more winter hardy than generally thought, as hardy or more so than Meteor or Mesabi)


Sour Cherry on own roots
3-5 ft- $18 ea

Please add 5 dollars per tree if ordering less than 3 trees. (total for order)
Limit of one per customer please

Evans Sour Cherry: Extremely productive sour cherry, a real "branch bender." Great for pies with true cherry flavor. If left on tree into August then delicious fresh also. Semi dwarf. Has survived 50 below according to one report, (not verified by me) but needs to harden off properly for that degree of hardiness. Fruit buds extremely hardy, to 43 below. Vigorous, on own roots, does extremely well in average soil and better than most in heavy soil and extremely well in light soil also.
Is doing fine in southern as well as northern WI and Edmonton Canada. Extremely early to bear and to bear heavily when young." Zone 3

Note: The Evans should be on its own roots, its grafts do not seem to last long.