Chelan cherry

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Chelan cherry
Genus Prunus
Species Prunus avium
Hybrid parentage Stella × Beaulieu
Cultivar Chelan
Origin Prosser, WA

The Chelan cherry is a cultivar of cherry. It is a hybrid of the Stella and Beaulieu varieties first developed in Prosser, Washington. [1]

Contents

Cultivar history

The Chelan cultivar was developed in Prosser, Washington, by Thomas Toyama and Ed Proebsting, affiliated with the University of Washington. The cross was made in 1971 and selected in 1978. [2]

Plant facts

The Chelan cherry tree grows in USDA Zone 5, [3] and is self-incompatible. [4] It is a vigorous and early-bearing tree; with the fruit ripening about 10-12 days earlier than Bing cherries, [1] it is the earliest of the sweet cherries grown in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. [5] The fruit exhibits superior cracking resistance, and the trees appear to be resistant to powdery mildew, but many of the trees produced in the 1990s were infected with prune dwarf virus. [6]

Growing regions

Apart from the US Pacific Northwest, Chelan cherries are grown in Canada [7] and Australia. [8]

Related Research Articles

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Honeycrisp Apple cultivar

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Black Tartarian Edible fruit cultivar

Black Tartarian is an heirloom cultivar of cherry. It was brought from Circassia to England in the 1700s by a man named Hugh Ronalds, and from England it was brought to the United States in the 1800s.

Stella cherry Edible fruit cultivar

Stella is a cultivar of cherry developed in British Columbia, Canada. It is notable as the first self-fertile sweet cherry to be named. It has been awarded the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

Black Republican cherry Edible fruit cultivar

The Black Republican cherry is a cultivar of cherry. While it is a hybrid, its parentage is not known; it is possibly a cross of the Napoleon and Black Tartarian cultivars, but has also been described as a seedling of the Eagle variety. One of the parents of the Bing cherry, the Black Republican was first grown in the U.S. state of Oregon about 1860 by the horticulturist Seth Lewelling, who gave it its name as a reflection of his Abolitionist beliefs.

Van is a cultivar of cherry originating from Canada.

The Sweetheart cherry is a cultivar of cherry. It is a hybrid of the Van and Newstar cultivars first developed in Canada.

Skeena is a cultivar of cherry originating in Canada.

Tieton is a cultivar of sweet cherry developed in Washington state.

References

  1. 1 2 Washington State University Tree Fruit
  2. "Register of New Fruit and Nut Varieties, List 41" HortScience Vol. 37(2), April 2002, pg. 253
  3. "Utah State University Extension". Archived from the original on 2019-06-16. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  4. Washington State University Tree Fruit
  5. "Oregon State University Extension" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-07-23. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  6. Northwest Nursery Improvement Institute
  7. British Columbia Tree Fruit Production Guide
  8. Cherry Growers Australia