HomeFruit TreesCherry TreesBlack Tartarian Sweet Cherry Tree

Black Tartarian Sweet Cherry Tree

(110 customer reviews)

$119.99

Begins shipping mid-April.

Pollinator required to bear fruit

Begins shipping
mid-April

Pollinator required to bear fruit

A popular and reliable producer of sweet, dark cherries! 

Brought to the United States from Russia in the 1700’s, this heirloom cherry is a popular choice for good reason! The Black Tartarian Sweet Cherry tree blooms prolifically to yield large crops of cherry-red to purplish-black, heart-shaped fruit.  

The sweet, rich flavor of these cherries are perfect for fresh-eating and juicing. This robust tree has such reliable blooms, that it makes for an excellent pollinating partner for any sweet cherry. Black Tartarian is hardy and disease-resistant, making it easy to grow! 

Characteristics

Bloom ColorWhite
Bloom TimeEarly
Fruit ColorRed
Fruit SizeMedium – Large
Ripens/HarvestJune
Soil CompositionLoamy
TasteSweet
TextureFirm
Soil pH Level6-7
Soil MoistureWell Drained-Average Moistness
Shade LevelFull Sun
Years to Bear4-7
Hardiness Zone Range5-8

Size & Spacing

Mature Size

Semi-Dwarf  4.5 – 5.5 m tall x 4.5 – 5.5 m wide (15 – 18′ tall x 15 – 18′ wide)
Dwarf  2.5 – 3 m tall x 2.5 – 4 m wide (8 – 14′ tall x 8 – 14′ wide)

Recommended Spacing

Semi-Dwarf 5.5 – 4.5 m (15 – 18′)
Dwarf 2.5 – 4 m (8 – 14′)

Ship Height

Supreme, Semi-dwarf Bare-root Ships 1 – 1.5 m tall (4 – 5′ tall) and/or with a 15.5 mm (5/8″) trunk.
Dwarf Supreme, Bare-root Ships 1 – 1.5 m tall (4 – 5′ tall) and/or with a 15.5 mm (5/8″) trunk.

Pollination

This variety requires another one for adequate pollination.

Cross-pollination by a different variety is key to its growing and bearing success. Plant a different variety within 15 meters (50 feet) for best pollination.

Recommended Pollinator: Van Sweet, Stella Sweet, Lapins, Bing, Napoleon Royal Ann

How do I find my Hardiness Zone?

Canada’s Plant Hardiness Zones will tell you which plants will do well in your particular climate. Each zone is determined by the lowest average winter temperature recorded in a given area. Hardiness Zone information is included on all tree and plant product pages, so you know instantly whether a certain plant is likely to succeed where you live. Natural Resources Canada provides helpful options to find your zone:

Find your zone by province and municipality »

Find your zone using an interactive map »

110 reviews for Black Tartarian Sweet Cherry Tree

  1. Diane Zoldak

    Taller and thicker trunk than I expected for a bare-root tree. Roots are nice, well distributed and healthy looking. Small leaves along the trunk only but that’s expected. Arrived in good shape despite the zobos at FedEx who bashed the box and kept it upside down. Congrats to Stark’s shipping department as everything arrived in good condition.

  2. Marilyn Coleman

    The black Tartan sweet cheery tree arrived quickly and looked great I followed instructions to soak before planting. The tree looks great. Your customer service department is a real asset to help with my selection.

  3. Deb Hughes

    Looks good. Growing well. I have high Hope’s for this tree.

  4. Edmund Symula

    Couldn’t be happier! Planted according to directions and keep it watered. 2 inches of new growth. Hope it makes it through the winter!

  5. Dominic Wolff

    The ordering was easy, my tree showed up a bit late, not due to stark bros. But the usual FEDEX hiccups I’ve encountered in the past. The leave were pretty yellow bu the tome I received the tree bit it is now thriving and green in my small orchard. Looking forward to eating cherries in the next few years!

  6. Teri Hansen

    Seems to be growing well but Japanese beetles ate the crap out of the leaves so have to wait til 2023 to see what it does.

  7. Ramesh Bharadwaj

    Thanka a lot, Stark Brothers, to provider me an undamaged,LIVE Stella tree which will be a welcome pollinater to my already grown up Bing Cherry. I shall try to do my best what likes in this region of Oceanside. Hope to get your help by keeping in touch..

  8. Laura Robinson

    Very happy and vigorous…came already budding out and rarin’ to go! It’s in a pot and getting bigger every day.

  9. Claire Cox

    This Tartarian Cherry arrived after the buds had died back. I planted it in a bucket of dirt to see how it would do. It tried to put out a few new shoots, but unfortunately I didn’t see them and the shoots quickly withered and died. I’m still hopeful that it will recover, but I won’t know how it’s doing until next spring. Too bad my order was late in the season for that tree. A delivery a few weeks’ earlier would have made a big difference.

  10. Sean Sean

    This tree is growing slow but is alive. We have had a hot summer and so far it appears it will make it though the summer we will have to wait and see

Add a review

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may also like…

Title