Have you ever wondered how long it takes for a white mulberry to go from a small cutting until it is large enough to fruit? I have grown cuttings a few times so thought I would share my experiences and hope that it helps someone.
I have looked on the internet and found a nursery overseas that claims they sell 2 year old plants that should fruit in 2 - 3 years. That seems overly long to me. Judging how quickly I get things to fruit from cuttings or seed grown and how much longer they claim it takes for 2 year old plants to fruit I would have doubts over the quality of their plants and/or the accuracy of their claims.
Large mulberry cuttings can fruit that same year, but what about small cuttings? Obviously it varies from plant to plant, some will fruit much faster or slower than others, and the climate will change things.
Here are some photos of a cutting that I took of a cutting from a white mulberry that is meant to be white fruiting (most white mulberries are dark fruited). The cutting was around 10cm long and far thinner than a pencil.
My little cutting went from this tiny cutting just sprouting roots September 2017:
to this small ~60cm tall tree just before going dormant:
to this little tree emerging from dormancy in October 2018:
Unless something goes wrong I should find out in a month or two if it is white fruited or dark fruited.
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Mulberry breaking dormancy - note the catkin emerging |
Almost every node that is producing leaves is also producing catkins, each of which should turn into mulberries.
It appears that this will be a productive tree once I plant it in the soil. I am hoping that it will be white fruited, but even if it is dark fruited I think it will still be well worth growing.
I am waiting until the fruit ripens before planting this tree in a larger pot or in the soil. I would hate for transplant stress to cause it to abort its fruit and have to wait another year.
I am assuming that some varieties of white mulberry take longer than this to fruit. I assume that some varieties will be more productive and others less productive than this one. Regardless, it appears that this is a productive and reasonably fast growing variety. Going from a cutting to a fruiting tree in a year is pretty impressive. I don't know of many fruit trees other than mulberry that can do this.