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Simple bare root fruit trees and ornamental trees

Penny

Prunus avium
Penny sweet cherries
Penny has received the RHS Award of Garden MeritPenny is listed in the RHS Plants for Pollinators

Penny is a large firm black English cherry with an excellent flavour.

It is one of a number of new varieties which are very late ripening - mid to late August - making it a good choice for extending the fresh cherry season.

Penny cherry trees for sale

  • RF11-year bare-root tree on Gisela 5 rootstock£47.00
    Mature height: 2m-3.5m after 10 years
    Can be trained on as a semi-dwarf medimu-sized cherry tree, or a medium-size cherry fan.
    Available next season
  • RF21-year bare-root tree on Colt rootstock£34.95
    Mature height: 3m-5m after 10 years
    Can be trained on as a large free-standing open centre or half-standard cherry tree, or a large fan-trained cherry..
    Available next season

Growing and Training

Penny is not self-fertile, so it needs a pollination partner and should not be planted as your only cherry tree - but any other self-fertile variety should be compatible. Commercial growers also use Kordia (another black cherry), Regina, Summer Sun, Skeena, Sweetheart, and Sunburst.

This variety is well-suited to the Gisela 5 rootstock.


History

Whilst much of the development of new cherry varieties over the last 5 decades has taken place in Canada, Penny was developed at East Malling Research in the UK by K. Tobutt, and released in 1998.


Penny characteristics

  • Gardening skillAverage
  • Fruit persistenceNormal ripening
  • Self-fertile?Not self-fertile
  • Pollinating othersAverage
  • Pick seasonVery late
  • Keeping1-3 days - keep in a fridge
  • Food usesEating fresh
  • Country of originUnited Kingdom
  • Period of origin1950 - 1999
  • Fruit colourBlack

You might also like these varieties

  • See also Lapins
    Lapins
    A popular red mid-season cherry which is easy to grow. Self-fertile.
  • See also Stella
    Stella
    Stella is perhaps the most popular mid-season red-cherry. Self-fertile and a good pollinator for other cherries.
  • See also Sunburst
    Sunburst
    A large red mid-season cherry with a good sweet mild flavour. Self-fertile.
  • See also Sweetheart
    Sweetheart
    One of the best-flavoured late-season cherries for the UK climate. Self-fertile.

More about cherry trees

Sweet cherries are easy to grow as long as you have a sunny sheltered spot. The main challenge is to keep the birds off - use a net or horticultural fleece to cover the tree or at least some of the branches in late spring.

If you only have space for one cherry tree make sure it is a self-fertile one. We highlight these on our website - look for Stella, Sweetheart, Sunburst, or Lapins.Self-fertile cherry trees are also good pollinators for the more traditional English cherry varieties.

Sweet cherries are often categorised by colour. Red cherries have red or skins and light red flesh, and nearly all the self-fertile cherries are in this category. So-called 'white' cherries usually have pale red or pink or white skins and pale flesh. So-called 'black' cherries usually have dark red or black skins.

Sweet cherries are also categorised by their picking season. Early season equates to mid / late June in southern England. Mid-season is late June / early July. Late-season is mid-July onwards.


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