British cherries set to be bigger and juicier this year
8th July 2025
The extra sunshine and hours of daylight over the last few months mean that British cherries will not only be bigger than in recent years but also sweeter and juicier.

The warmest UK spring on record has also resulted in the largest predicted yield for three years, with Tesco reporting that the retailer will be able to completely rely on UK-grown cherries from early July.
Tesco cherry buyer Olivia Amey said: “The extra sunshine and daylight hours have played a major part in the quality of the fruit we’ve been sampling from around the country over the last few weeks, and we know customers are going to be impressed.
“And it’s also meant that overall volume is up early in the season, meaning that we’ll be able to meet the usual summer demand for cherries solely with British produce.
“We’re also working with UK growers to extend the season by looking at new varieties of both early and late ripening cherries that can deliver a classic British-grown taste – fleshy, firm, plump and fit to burst with a great juicy surge of sweetness.”
Season to be extended by extra 10 days
One of Tesco’s growers, AC Hulme, based near Canterbury in Kent, said that the company is very optimistic about this year’s UK cherry season, which now lasts 10 weeks, almost double what it was just five years ago.
The UK cherry industry has transformed over the past two decades thanks to more and more British growers seeing better yields by using dwarf rootstock grafted onto new tree varieties.
These produce much smaller trees that can be grown in plastic tunnels, creating a microclimate with temperatures similar to the Mediterranean and protecting the fruit from inclement British weather.
These new smaller cherry trees can now be picked by workers on foot rather than ladders, enabling British cherries to remain competitively priced, Tesco said.
It has meant that UK cherry production is once again thriving and is now so strong that British growers are this year set to produce an estimated 8,000 tonnes of cherries – around four times the harvest in 2018.
Given that in 2015, 559 tonnes were picked in the UK, it shows just how far the revival has come in such a short space of time, the Tesco grower said.
AC Hulme managing director Tom Hulme said: “The British cherry industry is moving at pace again now, and new varieties are being brought in that are not only better suited to the British climate to improve quality and taste but also to help us extend the growing season.
“Over the last few years, we have brought in some exciting early-season varieties such as Sweet Aryana and Grace Star as well as exploring later-season cherries such as Kir Rosso, which will extend the current season by an extra 10 days.”
Mr Hulme explained that there are several other innovations being used to extend the UK season, such as controlling air conditions in storing rooms post-harvest to improve shelf life and also using different types of poly tunnels to accelerate and delay ripening cherries through limiting sunlight.
“Cherries are very susceptible to the weather, and if it is too rainy or too humid, the fruit suffers, but the good news is that this year we have had pretty decent growing conditions, and we are looking forward to a nice long season with the best quality fruit for several years,” he concluded.
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