Soil Preparation for Cherry Trees
Preparing the soil before you plant will greatly improve your cherry tree’s long-term performance and promote strong, healthy new growth. It is a good idea to have your soil tested prior to planting, and even annually after planting, to determine if it’s lacking in any essential minerals or nutrients. You can use one of our digital soil meters to test your soil or collect a soil sample to send to your local county Cooperative Extension for testing.
Once you know what’s lacking in your soil, you can amend it with whatever it needs: minerals, nutrients, pH correction or organic matter, which will help break up poor soil.
NOTE: This is part 5 in a series of 11 articles. For a complete background on how to grow cherry trees, we recommend starting from the beginning.
Common Soil Types
- Clay and silt soils are made of very small particles. They feel slick and sticky when wet. Clay and silt hold moisture well, but resist water infiltration, especially when they are dry. Puddles often form on clay or silt soils, and these soils become easily compacted.
- Loam soils are loose and look rich. When squeezed in your fist, moist loam will form a ball, which crumbles when poked with a finger. Loam soils normally absorb water and store moisture well. Loam soils can be sandy or clay-based, but are a generally a mix of sand, silt or clay, and organic matter. They will vary in moisture absorption and retention.
- Sandy soils contain large particles that are visible to the unaided eye, and are usually light in color. Sand feels coarse when wet or dry, and will not form a ball when squeezed in your fist, regardless of water content. Sandy soils stay loose and allow moisture to penetrate easily, but will not retain water for long-term use.
When to Prepare Your Soil
Soil preparation can be done any time of year, providing that the ground is not overly saturated with water or frozen. If your soil composition needs amending, you can use any of these, depending upon your goal:
- Compost (good for any soil)
- Sand (if your soil is clay-ey)
- Manure (good for any soil)
- Garden lime (if native soil pH is too low/acid)
- Sphagnum/peat moss (if native soil pH is too high/alkaline)
Your yard can provide you with lots of free organic materials, such as grass clippings and shredded leaves. Not only will the grass and leaves break down to provide soil nutrients naturally, but they will help loosen the soil as well. You can gather these in the fall with spring planting in mind.
Adding organic materials like compost will improve the composition of most every soil type. Organic materials bind sandy soil particles so they retain moisture and nutrients better. They also break apart clay and silt particles, so that water can soak in and roots can spread.