When I first moved into this house I planted two plums and a cherry. The cherry started leaking sap in year two and went, then the Guinevere plum died last year, and this year my final original prunus, the Yellow Pershore, is leaking sap like crazy, losing leaves, and looking very much like it's not long for this world. It's sad since it grew so well until this year, but I doubt it's going to survive. The original source of the infections was probably an old and sickly damson in the hedge that I chopped down a while ago.
Two cherries I added later, a Morello and a Celeste, still survive, but I'm a bit nervous now about adding more prunus, so I'm looking for alternatives that aren't members of that family. I also have three pears, three apples and a medlar, so I'm not sure about more pome fruit either (maybe a quince or a second medlar, since I do love medlars and my current one isn't very productive, but there's a lot to be said for variety).
Given the short list of non-pome, non-stone fruit trees, I'm thinking about planting a mulberry, but I'm concerned about the size. Maximum height and spread in excess of 8 meters are quoted, and I simply don't have room for that. Any replacement has to be at most 3 - 4m tall and wide, and the advice in books is that mulberries weep sap easily and should be lightly pruned. Does anyone have experience trying to keep a mulberry as a small-ish, bushy tree while also getting decent fruiting? Is it possible, excluding the Charlotte Russe variety which hasn't had great taste reviews on this forum? If not, any other suggestions that fruit reliably in the UK without shelter (e.g. not a fig)?
Two cherries I added later, a Morello and a Celeste, still survive, but I'm a bit nervous now about adding more prunus, so I'm looking for alternatives that aren't members of that family. I also have three pears, three apples and a medlar, so I'm not sure about more pome fruit either (maybe a quince or a second medlar, since I do love medlars and my current one isn't very productive, but there's a lot to be said for variety).
Given the short list of non-pome, non-stone fruit trees, I'm thinking about planting a mulberry, but I'm concerned about the size. Maximum height and spread in excess of 8 meters are quoted, and I simply don't have room for that. Any replacement has to be at most 3 - 4m tall and wide, and the advice in books is that mulberries weep sap easily and should be lightly pruned. Does anyone have experience trying to keep a mulberry as a small-ish, bushy tree while also getting decent fruiting? Is it possible, excluding the Charlotte Russe variety which hasn't had great taste reviews on this forum? If not, any other suggestions that fruit reliably in the UK without shelter (e.g. not a fig)?
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