#461 (Q4) TIBETAN CHERRY
Prunus serrula var. tibetica
Planted: 2010
This tree is on the north side of the Malus Avenue.
| Distribution: | Native to China. |
| Supplier: | Bluebell Arboretun and Nursery, Smisby, Ashby de la Zouch, Leicestershire. |
| Growth Habit: | Deciduous tree, 6 to 9 m, rounded. |
| Bark: | Bark can be a glossy red-brown, mahogany-like, which ultimately peels; handsome in winter when well exposed. |
| Leaf: | Simple, lanceolate, 5 to 10 cm long, regularly serrate (with small serrations). |
| Flowers: | White, 1.5 to 2 cm wide, grouped in 1 to 3, nodding, stalks 1.2 cm long, produced in Spring with, and hidden, by foliage. |
| Seeds: | Fruit oval, bright red, about 0.6 cm long. |
| Uses: | As an ornamental tree to provide winter interest with its mahogany-like bark. Also used as an interstem (interstock) for some Japanese flowering cherries. |
| Plant Hunter: | Ernest Henry Wilson collected it in the region of Tatsien-lu (Kangting) in Western Szechwan. |
| Introduction Date: | It was also collected later by George Forrest in 1913 from Yunnan. Second introduction by Roy Lancaster in 1981, from Sichuan. |
| Anecdotes and Comments: | Recognised with the Award of Garden Merit in 2002 by the Royal Horticultural Society. |