cherry 'Kordia'

sweet cherry (syn. Prunus avium Kordia)

cherry 'Kordia'

sweet cherry (syn. Prunus avium Kordia)

  • bare root | Colt root stock | 1.2m
  • £34.99
  • available to order from autumn 2024
  • bare root | G5 root stock | 1.2m
  • £69.99
  • available to order from autumn 2024
  • 9 litre pot | Colt root stock | 1.2m
  • £49.99
  • available to order from late spring
Delivery options
  • Standard £7.95
  • Position: full sun
  • Soil: moderately fertile, moist but well-drained soil
  • Rate of growth: fast
  • Flowering period: April to May
  • Hardiness: fully hardy


A black fruiting variety, ‘Kordia’ is a mid-season sweet cherry producing a heavy yield of large, firm fruit with a good flavour. It has some resistance to cracking but is not self-fertile, so will require a pollinating partner such as ‘Van’ or ‘Morello’. Nodding, white flowers in mid-spring precede the masses of small, edible glossy dark fruits.

Pollination information: Not self-fertile, this cherry requires another variety of cherry nearby. Ideally this should come from the same pollination group 3, however it is possible to use one from group 2 or 4 as well. Good options include 'Stella' or 'Sweetheart'.


  • Garden care:
    When planting your cherry tree, prepare a hole up to three times the diameter of its root system. Fork over the base of the pit in readiness, incorporating plenty of organic matter into the backfill and planting hole. Avoiding frozen and waterlogged soil, trees should be planted out and staked as soon as they arrive. If you've ordered a bare root tree, soak the roots in a bucket of water for half an hour prior to planting, or if this is not possible, they can be heeled in temporarily, covering their roots with soil, or potted up. Protect from cold, drying winds. Apply a balanced fertiliser in early spring to support growth and fruiting. Lightly prune in summer to reduce the risk of silver leaf and bacterial canker, to retain an open ‘goblet’ shape and remove any damaged, diseased or broken branches.
  • Goes well with