Native Black Cherry 2025 Master Post
Berries are a food source for many birds and mammals; the tree supports numerous butterfly and moth caterpillars.
Highly valued for furniture, cabinets, and musical instruments due to its fine grain and luster.
While the raw fruit is bitter, it is commonly used to make jams, jellies, and flavored liquors like brandy or rum.
The inner bark is a well-known, historically significant remedy for soothing, irritating coughs, bronchial infections, and asthma. It is used in, and acts as a, natural expectorant and sedative to calm coughing fits.
Extracts from the plant, including the bark and fruits, exhibit anti-inflammatory and analgesic (pain-relieving) properties, which can aid in managing joint pain and, as used traditionally, labor pains.
Black cherries are rich in antioxidants, particularly anthocyanins, which protect cells from damage and support cardiovascular health.
Traditionally used to aid in treating diarrhea and other digestive issues.
The Iroquois regarded wild cherry trees as inhabited by powerful spirits and used the bark in ceremonies to ward off evil. Associated with Venus, cherries are used in spells for romance, sweetness, and fertility. It is used to help in recovering from relationships that were not beneficial. Cherry-related magic is used to promote clear communication. The bark is used to revitalize magical energy for completing old, stalled projects. Cherries represent the intersection of innocence and knowledge, as well as the fleeting nature of life. Cherry juice is sometimes used as a substitute for blood in spells, and the fruit can be used to charge intentions for manifestation.
(Quick notes found through google. Please use caution and further research before doing your own experimentation with this foraged food).
Smrtná Neděle (Deadly Sunday) (4/6/25)
Under the cherry tree (5/1/25)
Native Black Cherry (Prunus serotina) (6/14/25)
Midsummer Black Cherry Cordial Day 1 🤞 (6/18/25)
Video of black cherry cordial fermenting (6/21/25)
Native Black Cherry Cordial with Elderflower Syrup (6/23/25)
My First Lammas Recipe—and second batch of native black cherry cordial (7/25/25)
Black cherry cordial offering on St. Anne’s Day (7/26/25)
Black Cherry 🍒 Syrup (7/30/25)
Wood Sorrel and Black Cherry “Lemonade” (7/31/25)
Lammas Day Protection and Abundance Ritual (8/2/25)
Consecrating cordial on Lammas eve (8/2/25)
Black Cherry Iced Tea (8/3/25)
Six Months in the Making — Native Black Cherry Cordial on St. Barbara’s Night (12/4/25)
A Baking Ritual—Midwinter Fruitcake (12/11/25)
Our Lady of the Abundant Garden (12/16/25)
St. John’s Wine — An At Home Blessing (12/28/25)
Witches’ Nights’ Amulet Bag Complete! (1/13/25)
2025 Foraging These Four Acres Master Post