

To coincide with the event, which is taking place on 18 July, here are some juicy facts and figures to get your taste buds flowing...
The cherries that are now cultivated are native to Asia Minor.
Cultivated cherries were probably introduced to Britain in the 1st Century AD.
There are more than 1,000 varieties of cherry.
The name prunus avium (the sweet cherry) comes from the Latin for plum and bird, possibly due to birds' love of cherries.
The heartlands of cherry growing in Britain are the South and West England, Kent, Hereford and Worcester, Buckinghamshire, Essex and and Oxfordshire.
British cherries blossom in April and become ripe from early June until late July.
Traditional varieties include: Duke, Hertford, Van, Stella, Sunburst, Summit, Lapins, Colney and Sweetheart.
Cherries were used during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries for their medicinal properties.
More recently, a study published in the BMJ in 2005 showed that drinking sour cherry juice could help reduce the symptoms of muscle damage caused by exercise.
100g of cherries contains 11mg of vitamin C, 27% of RDA.
Before the Second World War there were 30-40,000 acres in Britain (Shelia Keating, The Times 15JUL06).

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