🪴Pot & balcony guide

Growing Cornelian Cherry in a pot

For balcony, patio or terraceCornus mas

cornelian Cherry grows well in a pot of at least Ø 240 cm (10857 L capacity), in a position with full sun or partial shade. Watering: every 2 days in summer, once every 2 weeks in winter.

Cornelian Cherry (Cornus mas)
Foto: Geen machineleesbare auteur aanwezig. Op basis van auteursrechtclaims wordt auteur TeunSpaans aangenomen. / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0

Which pot?

Recommended pot size

Ø 240 cm

~ 10857 L potting soil

Choose a generous pot with good drainage — small pots restrict root development.

Watering

Summer

every 2 days

Winter

once every 2 weeks

Always use a pot with drainage holes. Water dries out faster in pots — or the plant drowns. Check weekly with your finger: only water when the top 2 cm of soil is dry.

Pot care

Once established, cornelian cherry is remarkably self-sufficient. Water during prolonged dry spells in summer, especially in the first two or three years, but mature plants cope well with moderate moisture and rarely need supplementary watering except in severe drought. Clay and loam soils hold moisture better than chalk, so adjust frequency accordingly. Feed in March or April with a general-purpose granular fertiliser such as blood, fish, and bone, scattered in a circle around the dripline at roughly 70 g per square metre, or apply a 3–5 cm top-up of garden compost as a mulch. Cornelian cherry isn't a heavy feeder, so a single annual application is enough. Avoid high-nitrogen feeds after mid-summer, as soft late growth is more vulnerable to winter cold. The shrub is fully hardy across zones 4a–8b and needs no winter protection in temperate Europe. Mulch helps conserve soil moisture and suppresses weeds, but refresh it only when it breaks down; a permanent thick layer against the stem can encourage rot. Pests and diseases are rare. Occasionally aphids cluster on soft new growth in spring; a strong jet of water usually dislodges them, or leave them for natural predators. Coral spot fungus can appear on dead wood; prune out affected stems and burn or bin them—don't compost. The edible fruits ripen in late summer; birds often take them before you do, but netting is an option if you want a crop for preserves. Cornelian cherry's low-maintenance reputation is well earned. An annual feed, a light post-flowering tidy, and occasional watering in drought are all it asks.

Pot-specific tip: add slow-release fertiliser pellets in March — potting soil exhausts much faster than open ground.

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