Yes, cherry blossoms do produce fruit.
Cherry blossoms are the flowers of cherry trees. The trees bloom in the spring and produce their fruit later in the season.
It is false that cherries grow on cherry blossom trees. Flowers called cherry blossoms grow on cherry blossom trees.
Yes, you can identify a cherry tree by its unique blossoms and fruit. Cherry blossoms are typically pink or white and have a distinct shape, while the fruit is small and round with a pit inside.
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!
Cherry blossom trees are called that because they produce cherry blossoms, which are the flowers of the cherry tree. The term "cherry blossom" refers specifically to the flowers that bloom on these trees, not the fruit they produce.
Depends if the fruit is in season and how soon you eat it
No because it blossoms fruit
A tree that has lots of spring blossoms that resemble cherry blossoms, but does not fruit. It produces pods at season's end that birds will sometimes eat.
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.
No, the Nanking cherry does not require a pollinator to produce fruit.
You should not remove fruit until it is ripe. Blossoms will produce the next fruit.
No, you do not need two cherry trees to produce fruit. Some cherry tree varieties are self-pollinating, meaning they can produce fruit with just one tree.