Interest by the public in small ornamental landscape trees has increased markedly over the past 25 years. Small (15- to 28-foot) flowering trees tend to fit well in residential lots with limited space and one-story ranch-style homes. Smaller trees can also be grown satisfactorily under utility lines. In addition, large trees block much of the potential sunlight available to a residential lot, which reduces the success of growing quality turf, gardens and flowers due to excess shade and the probability of increased disease problems.
Flowering crabapples have been a very popular small tree choice for decades. As woody plant evaluations have proceeded at
This article will cover promising cherry and plum cultivars, while the June article (Page XX) focused on pear cultivars.
‘Princess Kay’ has double flowers
Prunus nigra ‘Princess Kay’ is a selected cultivar of
Trees produce very dark-green, somewhat rough or rugose leaves, which turn to reddish shades in autumn. Trunk and branches are dark brown to black with large whitish lenticels. Trees grow oval to round in form, reaching 15 feet tall by 8-10 feet wide. Good soil drainage is required.
Sargent cherry is handsome
Sargent cherry (Prunus sargentii is native to northern
Consequently, this species had not been evaluated in NDSU trials until a named cultivar, Pink Flair, was received for trial in 2000. We are obtaining plants of this species, plus the cultivars ‘Columnaris’ (columnar Sargent cherry) and ‘Rancho’ from Oregon nurseries for trial evaluation this spring. Both ‘Columnaris’ and ‘Rancho’ were selected for narrower, more columnar growth habits than are characteristic of the species. ‘Rancho’ is described as even narrower in form than ‘Columnaris.’
Pink Flair is hardier
Pink Flair sargent cherry (Prunus sargentii ‘JFS-KW58’) merits widespread evaluation in the Northern Plains, based upon seven years of evaluations. It has not suffered any winter injury to date at our Absaraka site in Zone 3. Single pink flower clusters ornament the trees in spring. No fruits have been observed to date but they are described as 1/3 inch long, ovoid, purple-black drupes ripening in July. Leaves are semi-glossy and dark green. Fall color has varied from attractive red-purple to orange-red in NDSU trials.
J. Frank Schmidt & Son Co. in
A closer look at Emerald Charm
In the mid-1980s, Greg Morgenson, manager of Lincoln-Oakes Nurseries in Bismarck, N.D., collected seed from a planting of Mongolian cherry (Prunus fruticosa) in the Northern Plains. Some authors list the common name as European dwarf cherry or European ground cherry bush. This species is native in central and eastern Europe to
Emerald Charm (Prunus x ‘Morgenson’), a seedling selection, grows into an attractive small tree reaching 20-25 feet by 15-18 feet wide. It grows upright, multi-branched and vase-shaped in form with a uniformly spreading crown. It may be grown as a single- or multi-stemmed specimen similar to Japanese tree lilac. A collaborative release by NDSU, Emerald Charm is a putative hybrid between P. fruticosa and an unknown cherry species. It has good vigor under clean cultivation, averaging 1¼ feet of growth annually over a 16-year period. Growth is most rapid in earlier years.
Emerald Charm produces masses of small, white flowers in spring, followed by dark-green, very lustrous leaves, which are smaller than other cherry species. The thick-textured foliage holds up well during summer heat stress, becoming attractive yellow in autumn color. Emerald Charm is apparently sterile, having produced no fruit after 16 years, even though planted close to five other cherry species. It has been very hardy in Zone 3, one to two zones colder than the hardiness of many cherry species and cultivars.
Bark color is a dark reddish brown, and unlike amur chokecherry (P. maackii), no winter bark splitting has been observed. Propagation by mid-August budding on P. maackii and P. cerasus ‘Meteor’ seedling rootstocks was very successful and eliminates suckering. Budding on P. avium (sweet of mazzard cherry), a somewhat less-hardy rootstock, was not as successful.
This small tree will offer an attractive landscape alternative with superior foliage to most crabapple and other smaller tree species. We are encouraging wholesale nurseries to produce this new cultivar so it can be made available to the public.
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- Dale Herman
July 2008
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