yes
No It's physicly impossible
A cherry blossom tree lives for about twenty years.
The cherry tree is the loveliest.
So he could hide in cherry trees! have you ever seen an elephant in a cherry tree? -No. -See, it works!
According to my planting guide it says the tree is self pollinating. My tree has produced fruit for more than 7 years but if I can't find out how to prevent the squirrels from eating the immature fruit it will come down. My latest device is a motion activated sprinkler and this seems to be working. The tree is loaded. (Note there are no fruit trees near this tree to pollinate it).
No because one must have sour with sweet
The same as any other cherry tree. A pit.
The spacing for dwarf bing cherry tree is 10-20 feet. Also most sweet cherry (Bing) are not self pollinating they need a different cherry tree like black tratarian, van, republican, Stella nearby.
The cherry tree (various varieties) produce flowers. The flowers attract flying insects that cross pollinate the trees. Once pollinated, the cherry tree produces a fruit known as a cherry. They do not produce cones!
Yes. They are the same species and the same trees. The difference is the grafted on root system. However, the two varieties must have flowering times that overlap, otherwise they will not pollinate.
Of course you can. Assuming you have the proper tools, you can (i.e., it is physically possible to) trim any tree at any time. The question you should be asking is, "Will it harm my bing cherry tree if I trim it while it's in fruit?".
It needs another tree.
They will when mature and planted with a tree that can pollinate it . There are some ornamental varieties that are deliberately kept fruitless.
The Black Tartarian cherry tree needs to be pollinated by another cherry variety (Bing or another sweet cherry variety will do) in order to properly develop its fruit. Although the fruit can not develop without the tree having flowered first, flowering alone does not guarantee that the tree will set fruit.
Yes, Lambert cherry can work as a pollinator for your black sweet cherry trees, as they are compatible varieties for cross-pollination. Having a different cherry variety like Lambert will help ensure successful fruit set on your trees. Make sure they bloom at the same time for effective pollination.
Yes, however, you probably meant cultivar instead of species in this case. In the case of a cultivar, the answer is a qualified no. Most sweet cherries do not pollinate their own varieties. Most sour cherries do. Recent developements have come up with some self-fertile sweet cherry cultivars. Reputible nurseries will tell you which ones you need for which and usually have charts on hand to help.
Any plant can pollinate with any plant. Just so long as there's bees there. Bees accidentally get pollen from other plants on there feet and can ACCIDENTALLY cross-pollinate. So, yes, a pear CAN pollinate with a plum tree.