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DELIVERED SEPTEMBER 2026 Chandler Walnut Tree

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Chandler Walnut leaves and fruits
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Chandler Walnut flowers or catkins
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Chandler Walnut leaves and fruits
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Chandler Walnut approximate mature tree shape and size
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Chandler Walnut leaves and fruits
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 £79.50 
Available Options:
Pot Size Qty
7 Litre  

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Chandler Walnut Tree Options Explained

7 Litre: Around 150-200cm tall in a 7 litre pot, 2-3 years old.

Chandler Walnut Tree, Considered to Be First Choice of Walnuts Trees by Commercial Growers

Chandler Walnut Tree is a grafted English walnut variety for buyers who want a walnut with good cropping potential, large, easily removable and easy opening nuts, and a crop suitable for cooking and eating. Available to pick around late September and very good for pastries, salads, homemade bread etc. Likely to fruit in the first or second year of purchase.

Chandler is a relatively small walnut tree compared to other walnuts, but that does not mean tiny; it still needs proper garden space and a sensible planting position. It is considered moderately vigorous with a semi-upright shape, so it is more manageable than many larger walnuts, relatively speaking. Expect an average height and spread of around 15 x 8m, although some trees have been known to grow more. Pruning can help manage its size and shape.

In managed orchard conditions, published Chandler yield examples range from about 15–30kg per tree by roughly 6–8 years old, with older established trees sometimes claimed at 70kg or more. Some overseas nursery sources quote much higher mature-tree figures, up to 100–150kg per tree, but those should be treated as high-end orchard examples rather than normal garden expectations.

The large, smooth walnuts have thin shells and very light-coloured kernels. Chandler is lateral-bearing, so the nuts grow along more of the branch instead of only at the tips, which is why it is a heavy cropper and favoured by orchards. It is also a late-leafing and late-blooming walnut variety, which helps reduce the risk of spring frost damage compared with walnuts that come into growth earlier. It can crop on its own, but higher yields are possible with a pollination partner such as Franquette, Cisco or Fernette, with Franquette preferred.

Pests and diseases: Walnuts are generally trouble-free in UK gardens. Walnut blight can occur but is rarely a serious UK problem. Codling moth may occasionally damage walnuts, although it is much more commonly associated with apples and pears, and damage to walnuts is usually not significant.

Planting a Chandler Walnut Tree

Plant Chandler Walnut Tree in full sun or light shade, in a sheltered position away from frost pockets. Walnuts tolerate a range of soils, but Chandler is best planted in light, sandy, well-drained soil where the roots will not sit wet.

Dig a generous planting hole, set the tree at the same depth it was growing in the pot, backfill with soil, firm gently and water thoroughly. Keep it watered during dry spells in the first growing season, especially while the roots are establishing.

Pollination for Chandler Walnut Tree

Chandler Walnut Tree is self-fertile, so it can be planted as a single walnut tree where there is only room for one. However, if your main aim is reliable crops, it is better to give Chandler a compatible pollination partner.

Franquette is the preferred polliniser for Chandler. If you have space for two walnut trees, Chandler and Franquette make a stronger buying choice than relying on one tree alone.

The simple answer: Chandler can crop by itself, but should crop better with Franquette nearby.

Useful Information About Chandler Walnut Tree

Chandler is one of the few walnut varieties that became famous beyond ordinary garden planting. It was bred by the University of California, Davis, from a cross between Pedro and UC 56-224, made in 1963, and was released in 1979 as part of its walnut breeding programme. Its success was not minor: Chandler went on to become California’s leading walnut variety and was important enough to be used for the walnut genome sequencing project. Newer walnut varieties from the same breeding programme are still compared against Chandler for yield, nut quality and light kernel colour, which says a lot about how influential it became. It is not an old romantic heritage walnut; it is a modern, purpose-bred variety that became a benchmark for commercial walnut growing.

Chandler walnut trees can live 100 years or longer.

I wanted a Chandler walnut tree garden meme

I wanted a Chandler walnut tree.

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Quick Fruit Tree Links
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TOP SELLING FRUIT TREES, Wet ground issues then choose a PEAR TREE first, followed by APPLE TREES.

Fruit Tree Life Expectancy
Most fruit trees will give you AT LEAST 40 years of fruit. Pears can go to 70. 

Do I Need To Stake My Bare Root Fruit Tree?

9 out of 10 times the answer will be no, especially if under 200cm tall. However our article on Tree Staking should help guide you. 

Planting In The Corner Of A Garden 

Air and light is reduced in this location which could promote fungus and bacterial issues. Corners of houses and fences can also suffer leeching issues so we advise against it. 

 

General Walnut Information

Walnuts can be difficult to establish in their first year, and some shoot-tip dieback can happen while young trees settle in. To improve their chances, water well during dry spells and keep grass and weeds cleared from around the base of the tree, ideally to about 1 metre across. Walnut trees tolerate a range of soils, but they establish best in deep, fertile, well-drained soil in a sunny, sheltered position.

Most walnut trees sold for fruit are grafted rather than grown from seed. Grafted walnut trees usually give more predictable variety characteristics, better size and shape consistency, and earlier cropping than seed-grown walnuts. Some grafted walnut varieties can start cropping within a few years of planting, depending on the variety, tree size, growing conditions and establishment.

If you are going to pickle walnuts, pick them in late June or early July, before the shell has properly hardened.

To improve fruiting, some growers use a technique called girdling, ringing or cincturing. This deliberately restricts the flow of sap to reduce vegetative growth and encourage fruiting. It must be treated with caution: if done too tightly, too deeply, for too long, or in the wrong place, it can damage or even kill the tree. RHS notes that ringing is used in fruit production but is not advised for home gardeners because of the risk if done incorrectly. Anyone considering it should research the technique properly first and understand the risk before trying it.

Ideal conditions for walnut trees are deep, fertile, moisture-retentive but well-drained soil, full sun, shelter from strong winds and avoidance of frost pockets. If the soil is poor, improve the wider planting area with well-rotted organic matter rather than creating a rich isolated pocket in the planting hole.

Walnuts are large trees, so check the expected mature size of the variety before planting. Many need a generous open position rather than a small garden corner. A nitrogen-rich feed or a quality mulch in early spring can help keep the tree healthy, especially while it is establishing.

Walnut shells have interesting uses in industry. They are used for cleaning and polishing materials such as soft metals, plastics, wood, stone and fibreglass.

Walnut trees can produce juglone, a natural compound that may suppress the growth of some nearby plants. The issue is generally associated more strongly with black walnut, Juglans nigra, but English/Persian walnut, Juglans regia, can still produce juglone to a lesser degree. Avoid planting very sensitive plants directly beneath or very close to walnut trees, especially under the canopy where roots, fallen leaves and husks are concentrated. Shade, dry soil and root competition can also make planting under an older walnut difficult.

Seed-grown Juglans regia can take many years to crop, which is one reason grafted walnut varieties are usually preferred for fruit production.

Walnuts are one of the oldest tree foods known to have been used by people, with records commonly traced back thousands of years. The common walnut is often associated with Persia and the wider region around modern Iran, and walnut trees were introduced to Britain by the Romans.

Walnut trees can be long-lived, and established trees may remain productive for many decades in good conditions.

Walnuts are energy-dense and contain unsaturated fats, protein, fibre, vitamins and minerals. Per 100g of shelled walnut, they contain approximately:

65g of fat, most of which is unsaturated fat
15g of protein
14g carbohydrates
7g dietary fibre

Calories per 100g: around 650

Per 100g of shelled walnut, they also contain approximately:

441mg potassium
346mg phosphorus
158mg magnesium
98mg calcium
3.4mg manganese
3.1mg zinc
2.9mg iron
1.6mg copper
98µg folate
0.54mg vitamin B6
0.34mg thiamin

General Walnut Tree Pollination

All walnut trees have male catkins and female flowers. In a perfect world, the male pollen release happens at the same time as the female flowers are ready to accept it and maximum pollination occurs giving largest possible walnut fruit harvest. Some walnuts have a time gap between the males releasing pollen to the females being ready to accept it i.e. smaller crop. By having another walnut tree that releases pollen at the same time as your female flowers are ready to accept it, you can increase the size of your walnut crop. 

Unfortunately, pollination is not always a two way process like apples and other fruits so some combinations may mean only one tree has increased fruit yield. Our suggestions for partners give you maximum harvest size. 

General Walnut Tree Pruning

Walnut trees need less pruning than apples, pears or plums. The aim is to build a strong, open tree, remove badly placed growth and avoid heavy cutting unless there is a clear reason.

The safest time to prune walnut trees is from mid-summer to early autumn, while the tree is still in leaf. If you absolutely must, this can be extended into early winter, but avoid pruning in late winter or spring because walnut trees can bleed sap heavily if cut at the wrong time. Choose a dry pruning day with good weather forecast to help cuts dry out. Do not use tree wound sealant, as this can trap pathogens.

For a young walnut tree, keep pruning light. Remove dead, damaged, diseased, crossing or badly placed shoots. If the tree is forming a poor shape, choose a good main leader and well-spaced side branches, then remove competing leaders or awkward branches before they become large.

Some inward-growing young shoots may be trained into a better position rather than cut out. Do not tie string tightly around a walnut branch, as this can restrict growth. Use a loose loop, rubber tree tie or another non-restricting method.

For an established walnut tree, prune only where there is a clear reason. Remove dead wood, crowded or crossing branches, and any low limbs that are in the way. Avoid heavy cutting and do not try to keep the tree small by hacking it back; walnuts respond better to early training and light correction than hard pruning later.

Walnut Tree Shaping For Light And Higher Yields

A walnut tree with a clear main leader and well-spaced side branches is usually easier to train into a strong, open shape. Good spacing helps light and air reach more of the canopy, which supports healthy growth and cropping.

The basic aim is to avoid the upper branches becoming too dominant and shading the lower branches. On young trees, remove or shorten badly placed competing growth early, before it becomes large. Keep the branches well spaced from each other to promote light and air through the canopy.

A bush-shaped walnut tree, where several main branches start low to the ground, is best pruned lightly to keep the centre open and reduce crossing, crowded or inward-growing branches.

Training young side branches to a wider, more horizontal angle can help create a stronger, better-lit branch structure and may improve cropping potential.

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