24 June 2025

Cherries and also not cherries

(The Vegetable Challenge has restarted!  More details next week!) 

It turns out I've not been getting many Kordia cherries or Czar plums off my trees for the past several years because of a pair of pigeons.  They were witnessed in the spring, methodically stripping both buds and young leaves from my trees, meaning hardly any fruits formed at all.  These are wood pigeons (we don't currently have any feral pigeons around);  one of the neighbors has been known to shoot them with an air rifle in his own garden--but in this case I would have been quite happy to shoot them myself!  They're too big for netting:  I don't know if I can protect my trees in the future.

A small cherry tree in a leafy garden with a white net curtain draped over a few lower branches and two smaller white cloths wrapped around the ends of a few other branches;  there are a few flowers in the garden and the roof of a house behind the tree
Hiding the few cherries that survived the pigeons, June 2025

Close up of a large bunch of bright red cherries growing on a leafy branch; a white cloth is showing behind it with the end of a finger holding back a leaf
Only a few Kordia cherries, but at least they're perfect underneath their cloth napkin, June 2025

On the other hand, my little Morello cherry tree produced a good amount of cherries this year, maybe because the branches are much smaller/thinner (wood pigeons are pretty big birds) and the tree itself is very close to the house.  I fully netted it a little while ago and have been picking red cherries and freezing them this past week.

A very small cherry tree wrapped almost completely in green mesh, with only its short trunk showing.  There is a tall fence behind and the branches of a fig tree on the left and an apple tree on the right
Already picked a freezer bag of Morello cherries, June 2025
I can only assume the pigeons treated my small Stella cherry tree the same way they did the Kordia as it also has very little fruit.  Its top has died back and it's suffering from aphids in a bad way;  I don't know if it'll survive.  My plum tree, just around the corner (seen a little bit in the top right corner), had a couple years of bad aphids which I think the local sparrows eventually sorted it out;  this tree isn't visible from the house (unlike almost all of my other fruit trees) so I don't know if the birds are helping it this year or not.  While every ladybug and/or larva I find goes onto this tree, other than that, my policy is to not intervene.  I focus on setting up healthy conditions for my little garden ecosystem, a la permaculture;  it's up to the ecosystem to sort out its own details.  If I lose this tree, I can console myself with the thought that it only cost me £4 or £5, and I do have another healthy tree.
A small, rather sickly looking cherry tree growing next to a gray cinder block wall;  its top branches are bare and growing on the left are a purple clematis and ivy;  to the right is a flimsy wood and wire gate and a black plastic water butt;  there is a white house beyond the top of the wall
Sad Stella cherry tree, June 2025
As an aside:  there are a lot of wild cherry trees at our local country park just a few streets away;  some are pretty sour but others are quite nice.  Just much too small to preserve in any way:  good for eating and spitting out the pits.  At least we've been able to eat cherries this year, one way or another.

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