Mulberry

Mulberries can be dioecious (it’s either a male or female tree) or monoecious (both female and male flowers on the same tree). It can change from one sex to another. Male trees don’t bear fruits. Female trees can bear fruits itself but no seeds if there’s no male tree nearby.

Requirements

Mulberry trees are relatively drought-tolerant. Look into the following factors when you select the varieties you want to plant.

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Size

Depends on the varieties, it can be 30-60′ tall, 20-40′ wide.

Zone

4-8
Check your planting zone here.

Sun/shade

Full sun or partial. More sun is better for more fruit.

Water

Deep water once a week or more on hot days at the first year.

Soil

Not picky as long as it’s well drained. Acidic to neutral.
USU soil testing

Pollination

Their flowers are spiky catkins that can be either female (looks like lil fruit with pistils sticking out) or male (cluster with stamens). Pollicated by wind – no pollinators needed.

How to plant a tree?

After you decide on a good spot, follow this instruction to plant your tree.

Where to buy a tree?

You can purchase bare roots online and plant them in early spring. Or check out nurseries nearby for potted trees.

How to take care of them

Mulberry trees require little care and pruning is not necessary. If you would like to maximize the fruit production, prune and fertilize in early spring.

Pruning

Do it when it’s dormant but not too cold (>50°F). Note that mulberries bloom and fruit on the previous year’s growth, so extensive pruning will reduce fruit production. 

Fertilizing

Feed your tree once in late winter with a balanced 10-10-10 mixture.

Pest control

Knock off the bugs with strong blast of water or insecticidal soap. Or release predators depending on what pests you have.