Chokecherry
FruitPrunus virginiana
Have seeds for this? Add to inventory →Chokecherry is a small native tree or large shrub of North America, producing dense clusters of white flowers in spring and heavy crops of small dark red to black astringent cherries in late summer. One of the most widespread and historically important native food plants of North America, chokecherries were a foundation food for many Indigenous nations and make excellent cooked preserves, syrup, juice, and wine despite their raw astringency. An important wildlife plant and pollinator tree, chokecherry earns its place in edible landscapes and food forests.

Growing Conditions
Growing Conditions
Sunlight
Full Sun to Partial Shade
Water Needs
Low to Moderate
Soil
Adaptable to most soils; tolerates clay, sandy, and rocky conditions; pH 5.5 - 7.5
Spacing
10 - 15 feet for standard tree; suckering shrub form spreads to 6 - 10 feet wide
Days to Maturity
First small crop in year 3 - 4; full production in year 5 - 7
Growing Zones
Growing Zones
Thrives in USDA Zones 2 - 7
When to Plant
When to Plant
Transplant
Plant bare-root stock in early spring or containerized nursery plants in spring to early summer
Harvest
Harvest clusters when berries are fully dark red to black and come off the stem easily; taste improves after first frost; process quickly as berries ferment rapidly
Phenology (Natural Timing Cues)
Transplant
Plant bare-root chokecherry in early spring as soon as soil is workable. Like most Prunus species, it establishes readily when planted into moist soil at the beginning of the growing season.
- Forsythia is blooming or soil is just becoming workable.
- No hard frost expected in the next 2 weeks.
- Deciduous trees in the area are swelling their buds but not yet leafed out.
Start Dates (Your Location)
Average dates use your saved zone; readiness also checks your forecast when available.
Best Planting Window
Spring window
Early spring
Plant as soon as the soil is workable so roots establish before heat arrives.
Autumn window
Usually skip autumn planting
Use spring unless you have locally grown nursery stock and enough mild weather for roots to establish.
Planting Method
Plant nursery-grown transplants. They establish faster and more reliably than starting this plant from seed.
Critical Timing Note
Plant while dormant and before bud break so roots establish before leaves demand water.
Use the average timing, but check your local forecast before planting.
Typical Harvest Window
July to September
Organic Growing Tips
Organic Growing Tips
Remove Eastern tent caterpillar egg masses (brown, foamy rings on twigs) in winter before they hatch.
Prune out any black knot fungus galls immediately on sighting, cutting 4 inches below the gall into clean wood and disposing of cuttings.
Process chokecherries within 1 - 2 days of harvest; the berries ferment quickly and the quality declines fast.
Train to single trunk early if you want a tree rather than a thicket; remove suckers annually.
Plant in groups of 2 or more for cross-pollination and heavier fruit set.
Care Guidance
Optional seasonal guidance for what you can do, even when nothing is urgent.
Care Guidance
Watering
If dry weather lingers, let the top 2 inches start to dry before watering again. This plant often responds better to an occasional deep soak than to frequent light watering.
Feeding
Extra feeding is rarely required if soil is healthy. If growth looks pale or slow, a light compost top-dressing is often enough before adding anything stronger.
Pruning
If pruning is needed, dormancy or the period just after harvest is often the simplest window. Dead, damaged, or crossing growth is usually the first place to start.
Seasonal care
In late fall, a light cleanup and fresh mulch can help if winter protection is useful in your climate. Leaving a little space around crowns and trunks often helps air move and keeps excess moisture from sitting there.
Known Varieties
Common cultivars worth knowing
Known Varieties
Shubert (Canada Red)
Ornamental selection with leaves that emerge green and turn deep purple-red by midsummer; widely planted as an ornamental street and garden tree as well as for fruit.
Best for
Ornamental edible landscape, fruit production, zones 2 - 6
Straight Species
Seed-grown chokecherry with the greatest genetic diversity and best wildlife value; variable fruit quality but highest ecological benefit.
Best for
Wildlife planting, food forest, naturalizing, zones 2 - 7
Robert
A more compact selection with reliable fruit production; bred for prairie garden conditions.
Best for
Small garden spaces, prairie planting zones 2 - 5
Companion Planting
Companion Planting
Good companions
- Wild Rose
- Highbush Cranberry
Support & insectary plants
Nearby plants that attract pollinators, beneficial insects, or improve soil health.
- Serviceberry
Attracts pollinators
- Elderberry
Attracts pollinators
- Wild Bergamot
Attracts pollinators and beneficial insects
- Goldenrod
Attracts beneficial insects and produces nutrient-rich mulch
Common Pests
Common Pests
- Eastern Tent Caterpillar
- Black Knot Fungus
- Aphids
- Cherry Fruit Fly
- Shothole Fungus
All pest management in Garden uses safe, organic, non-toxic methods only. No synthetic pesticides, ever.
Simple Ways to Use
Simple Ways to Use
Start here if you're not sure how to use this crop in the kitchen.
Quick recipes you can make right away
Chokecherry Syrup
Simmer ripe chokecherries with a little water until the fruit softens and releases its juice, then strain and sweeten the liquid to taste. Use the syrup for pancakes, drinks, or desserts once the pits are fully strained out.
Cooked Chokecherry Sauce
Cook the fruit with sugar for 8 to 12 minutes until it breaks down and the juice thickens slightly, then strain or mill out the pits and skins if you want a smoother sauce. Chokecherries are usually better cooked than eaten plain.
Chokecherry Jelly Base
Simmer the fruit with a little water until the skins split and the juice runs freely, then strain the liquid for jelly making. Do not crush or consume the pits, and discard them after straining.
How to Preserve
How to Preserve
Use this section to store or process extra harvest before it spoils.
Practical methods for extra harvest
Freeze cleaned chokecherry pulp or juice
Cook the fruit briefly if needed, strain out pits and skins, and freeze the cleaned pulp or juice in small containers with a little headspace. Freeze in small portions so you can thaw only what you need for sauce, syrup, or jelly.
Make chokecherry jelly or syrup
Extract the juice by simmering and straining the fruit, then cook it with sugar using a tested recipe if you want shelf-stable jelly or syrup. Follow the tested recipe exactly for proper processing time and safety.
Dry pitted chokecherries
Pit the fruit if practical and dry it at 135°F until the flesh feels leathery and no wet juice remains inside. Cool the fruit fully before storing so the container stays dry.
New to preserving food?
New to freezing? Read the freezing guide.New to dehydrating? Read the dehydrating guide.How to Store
How to Store
Simple storage tips
Keep chokecherries cold in the refrigerator and use them within about 3 to 5 days, because ripe fruit softens quickly.
Store them dry in a shallow container so the fruit underneath does not crush.
Use any fruit with split skins or leaking juice first for syrup or jelly.
Do not consume the pits, and discard them after pitting or straining cooked fruit.
Freeze or cook ripe fruit quickly if you will not use it within a day or two.
How to Save Seed
How to Save Seed
Step-by-step seed saving
- 1
Chokecherry pits can be planted, but seed-grown plants may vary and are not the practical way to keep a particular fruit quality consistent.
- 2
If you want more of the same chokecherry, use suckers, cuttings, or nursery stock instead of saving pits.
- 3
Pits can be saved only for experimentation or breeding, not for keeping a named or especially good plant true to type.
Native Range
Native Range
- Origin
- Native across most of North America, from the Atlantic coast to the Pacific and from the subarctic south to northern Mexico.
- Native Habitat
- Forest edges, stream banks, thickets, roadsides, and disturbed areas in a wide range of soils; adaptable to dry to moist conditions in full sun to light shade.
- Current Distribution
- One of the most widely distributed native trees in North America; abundant throughout its range; occasionally weedy in disturbed sites.
Taxonomy
Taxonomy
- Kingdom
- Plantae
- Family
- Rose family (Rosaceae)
- Genus
- Prunus
- Species
- virginiana
Morphology
Morphology
Root System
Spreading, suckering root system that produces numerous root suckers, causing the plant to spread into thickets over time; roots are moderately deep and drought-tolerant once established.
Stem
Variable habit from a large multi-stemmed shrub to a small tree 15 - 30 feet tall; smooth gray-brown bark with characteristic bitter almond scent when scratched; multiple stems unless trained to single trunk.
Leaves
Alternate, oval to obovate, dark green, smooth-edged with fine serrations; 2 - 4 inches long; yellow in autumn; two small glands (nectaries) visible at the base of the leaf blade near the petiole.
Flowers
Dense cylindrical racemes of small white 5-petalled flowers 3 - 6 inches long; produced abundantly in May; strongly and sweetly fragrant; excellent for pollinators in early spring before many other trees bloom.
Fruit
Small drupes 0.3 - 0.5 inch in diameter in hanging clusters; ripening from red through dark red to nearly black in July - September; very astringent raw; sweet-tart and richly flavoured when cooked; the single pit contains toxic cyanogenic compounds and must be discarded.
Natural History
Natural History
Prunus virginiana, chokecherry, is one of the most widely distributed and historically significant native trees of North America, growing from the Atlantic coast to the Pacific and from the subarctic forests of the Yukon south to northern Mexico. Its range encompasses virtually every climatic zone except the tropical southeast, making it the most ecologically versatile of the native cherries. The common name "chokecherry" refers to the intense astringency of the raw fruit, which causes a puckering sensation in the mouth strong enough to "choke" an unwary eater - yet this same astringency disappears almost entirely when the fruit is cooked or processed, yielding a richly flavoured dark cherry juice and preserve. Chokecherry was among the most important plant foods across the Indigenous nations of North America. The Lakota, Cheyenne, Blackfoot, Comanche, Ojibwe, Haudenosaunee, and dozens of other nations all depended on chokecherries as a major component of pemmican - the concentrated dried-meat-and-berry food that was the essential caloric staple of plains and subarctic travel and winter food stores. In the Plains Indian tradition, whole chokecherries including the pits were pounded into a paste and dried into cakes; the pits were ground with the flesh and their cyanogenic glycosides, while present in raw form, appear to have been rendered less harmful by this processing and drying method, though this traditional processing method is not recommended for home use. The Métis of the Canadian prairies, the mixed-heritage communities descended from European fur traders and Cree and Ojibwe nations, developed chokecherry wine as a traditional craft beverage. In early American and Canadian settlement history, chokecherries were gathered commercially for jelly, wine, and medicinal syrup preparations.
Traditional Use
Traditional Use
Chokecherry has one of the most extensive documented medicinal use traditions of any North American native plant, recorded across dozens of Indigenous nations from the subarctic to the Southwest. The bark was particularly valued as a medicinal preparation across many traditions, used in cough and respiratory remedies. The berries were used as food and in preparations for digestive complaints. The plant also figures prominently in Plains Indigenous ceremonial traditions. Early Euro-American physicians documented chokecherry bark as a medicinal ingredient, and "wild cherry bark" syrup became a standard pharmaceutical preparation by the 19th century.
Parts Noted Historically
Ojibwe (Anishinaabe) people, Great Lakes region - Bark and berries
Ojibwe ethnobotanical records document chokecherry as one of the most used medicinal plants in the Great Lakes tradition. Inner bark preparations were used for coughs, colds, and fever; berry preparations for digestive complaints; and the plant held significance in ceremonial and spiritual contexts. Daniel Moerman's Native American Ethnobotany database lists chokecherry as among the most widely used medicinal plants across all documented North American Indigenous traditions.
Lakota and Plains peoples, Great Plains - Berries
For the Lakota and other Plains nations, chokecherry was first and foremost a food plant of critical importance, incorporated into pemmican and cooked preparations. The dried berries were traded and served as emergency rations. Medicinally, berry juice and bark preparations appeared in treatments for diarrhea and respiratory complaints consistent with the wider Native tradition.
American and European pharmaceutical medicine, 19th - early 20th century - Bark
Wild cherry bark (from Prunus serotina, the closely related black cherry, and P. virginiana) appeared in the United States Pharmacopeia from 1820 through the mid-20th century, used in expectorant and cough syrup preparations. The compound prunasin in wild cherry bark is hydrolyzed to benzaldehyde and prussic acid during processing; the prepared syrup was standardized to contain subtherapeutic levels of these compounds while preserving the flavour and soothing properties. Wild cherry bark flavour remains in commercial cough syrups today.
The leaves, bark, and seeds (pits) of chokecherry contain cyanogenic glycosides (primarily prunasin) that release hydrogen cyanide when metabolized; these parts of the plant must never be eaten or used in food preparations. The ripe flesh of the berries themselves contains much lower levels and is safe when cooked and when the seeds are removed; traditional processing methods that ground whole berries including pits are not safe to replicate at home. Chokecherry fruit should always be cooked before eating; raw berries consumed in large quantities may cause nausea from the cyanogenic compounds in the skin and flesh. Keep the plant away from livestock, especially horses and cattle, for which wilted chokecherry leaves are acutely toxic.
This information is provided for historical and educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making decisions related to your health.
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