It’s been a pretty nice spring around here so far, a little drier than ideal, but the temperature has been mostly mild and with a little strategic watering, the garden is doing well.
A few days ago, I harvested my first (admittedly late) lettuce for a salad, and the locusts I call my sons devoured all the pea pods, strait from the plants. Last week, I pulled radishes that I promptly gave to my mother once I remembered that radishes are gross.
Now I’m watching the formation of green tomatoes, tiny peppers, blossoms that will someday soon become cucumbers, and the crazy growth of squash and melon plants that will eventually battle the potatoes for an epic garden takeover.
The blueberry bushes are producing, and the young strawberry plants are coming along. The blackberry brambles we planted last year are progressing nicely, and our apple trees are looking to be as productive as they ever have been. That means we have an awful lot of applesauce to eat still between now and harvest time.
But the one thing we don’t have this year is cherries. With the exception of only a few years in my life, I have always lived with at least one cherry tree in my yard. Their beautiful pink and white blossoms against a storm blue sky is one of my favorite sights of early spring, and I know that spring has truly arrived when I begin fighting the robins for the bright red fruit.
Then come the pink-stained fingertips from endless seeding, followed by a thick slice of tart cherry pie smothered with a scoop of homemade vanilla ice cream. Add in a buttery ear of sweet corn, and this midwestern gal just tasted summer.
But not this year. Because as mild as our weather has been, we did have one unfortunate cold snap that brought us a night of freezing temperatures just as those beautiful blossoms were fully developed and ready to turn the corner into juicy orbs of deliciousness. We watched anxiously to see what would happen, and slowly admitted the cherry harvest wasn’t going to happen.
Our tree, that only a few weeks earlier had been so full of promise that I went ahead and used up the last two cups of last year’s frozen harvest to bake chocolate chip cherry bread, had no more than a handful of fruits on it. And the birds ate those.

It’s okay, though. I’ll miss the homegrown pie, but at least I’m comforted knowing we won’t go the way of US President Zachary Taylor, who died sixteen months into his presidential term at the age of 65. Taylor, a hardened war hero known as “Old Rough and Ready” because of his rugged, unstoppable nature, may very well have been brought low by cherries.
That’s not the only theory floated by historians and physicians. His own doctors believed he died from cholera, not uncommon in Washington DC at the time. What is known for sure is that on July 4th of that year, the president attended Independence Day festivities at the construction site of the nation’s favorite phallic monument, and while there, ate quite a large number of cherries, which he chased down with a good quantity of iced milk.
That sounds like a pretty great 4th of July to me, but it didn’t work out so well for Old Rough and Ready. Evidently it was a warm day and President Taylor took a stroll along the Potomac before heading back to the White House. Once there, he ate more cherries and enjoyed a lot of ice water to cool down.

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Then that night, the president got sick. Like really sick, with full on abdominal cramping, nausea, and diarrhea of the variety that, I assume, makes you regret your life choices.
It’s possible, of course, the water was contaminated, as Washington DC is well known for containing an awful lot things that are difficult to stomach, or perhaps the iced milk was at fault. But another theory is that the acidity from the cherries Taylor consumed, combined with the acidity of the milk, caused the severe abdominal distress from which he never recovered. He died on July 9th, 1850, leaving Millard Fillmore, of unearned bathtub fame, in charge of the nation.
It is true that Taylor had made some political enemies during his brief stint in the White House. His support for the Wilmot Proviso, which would have excluded slavery in territories acquired from the Mexican-American War, along with his strongly worded promise to personally bring the hurt to anyone who attempted succession, have led some historians to suspect assassination.
I’m not convinced there’s very strong evidence for that, though I admit assassination by cherries would be awfully clever. I know of at least one blogger who may want to use that in a story sometime.
Regardless of whether assassins, or cherries, or bacteria, or all three are to blame for President Taylor’s early demise, the whole story does make me feel a little bit better about our own lack of cherry harvest. Still, I sure could go for a slice of homegrown cherry pie about now.


All cherries are grown in someone’s home. It’s not like factories make fake cherries to put into pies hehehe I refuse to believe there’s a difference in taste if the cherries come from your own tree.
The taste may be the same, but the feeling is different.
Well, actually, most cherries are grown in large commercial orchards, a cherry “factory” if you will. hahaha – I couldn’t resist.
Door County in Wisconsin is beautiful to drive through and later in the season there are roadside stands everywhere with cherries by the pound or by the bushel, cherry juice, wine, pie filling, etc.
That’s a good thought. I have a brother not too far from there. Maybe I should plan a trip!
You wouldn’t be sorry.
Unlike George Washington obviously Zachary Taylor told a lie about how many cherries he ate. We had a shocking harvest of nearly everything this year – Cyclone Gabrielle came and blew everything away just as it was flowering. So there were very little preserves to do. I think I’ll make a cherry pie instead!
Thankfully, I think we are fairly safe from cyclones in Missouri, but guess I shouldn’t get too cocky. A few years ago, a late season wind storm took quite a bit of our apple harvest, so one can never be too sure.
We won’t get cherries this year either 😦 The cold snap got our trees too. They didn’t even bloom! 😦
Oh man. Maybe next year. Our trees are awfully tall, but we’re thinking of making a cover for them just in case we end up running into this problem again.
Oddly enough, we had a bumper crop this year from our two dwarf trees. After the cold snap, we figured it was over. Greg wasn’t even planning on harvesting. Then, the tree rallied and produced over 23 pounds. And there were still lots left on the higher branches for the birds.
Greg has a pitting device, so that went fairly quickly. Four hours after the picking began, the cherries were ready for the fridge for later wine making. The pits are soaking in vodka to make cherry vodka.
The black raspberries (also used for wine making) are another story. Their crop was dismal at best…not even worth the time to try and pick them. The birds are happy.
Wow! The line of death for cherries must fall somewhere in between us. We don’t live all that far apart!
A nice reflective personal and historical read. Wishing you a better forthcoming cherry harvest. They are a favorite for me too. ❤️
Thank you! The plan right now is to get some old sheets and to sew a cover for tree that typically produces well, in case we need to protect t it. We’ve occasionally covered it in past years, but it has gotten really tall. It’s going to take some more effort, but it’ll be worth it.
❤️💚✅🧤💚 love that green thumb of yours.
I think the Boogiemen sang about this in Swing Low Sweet Cherry, Comin’ for to Carry Me Home.”
Hmm. Could be.