Hardired Nectarine Tree
A cold-hardy nectarine bred to shrug off late frosts and reward you with firm, freestone fruit that tastes like sun-warmed summer.
The Hardired nectarine (Prunus persica ‘Hardired’) was developed in Canada specifically for growers in cooler climates, where most nectarines sulk or refuse to set fruit. It produces medium-to-large fruit with smooth, glowing red-over-yellow skin and firm, yellow freestone flesh that pulls cleanly from the pit. The flavor is classic nectarine — sweet, rich, and aromatic with a bright tang — and the fruit holds up beautifully whether you eat it fresh off the branch, slice it into a salad, or bake it.
Why growers choose the Hardired
- Genuinely cold-hardy. Bred in Ontario for tough winters, it thrives in zones 5–8 where many nectarines fail, and its blossoms resist late-spring frost damage better than most.
- Freestone convenience. The firm yellow flesh separates cleanly from the stone, so slicing, canning, and freezing are quick and mess-free.
- Disease resistance. Hardired carries notable resistance to bacterial spot and is one of the more brown-rot-tolerant nectarines, meaning fewer sprays and more clean fruit.
- Self-fertile. A single tree sets a full crop on its own — no second tree required — making it ideal for smaller yards.
- Reliable producer. Vigorous and dependable, it bears heavily once established, ripening its fruit in August.
At a mature 10–12 feet tall and wide, Hardired fits a backyard orchard, a sunny corner of the garden, or a spot near the patio where you can pick fruit by hand. Kept pruned, it stays an easy size to harvest and net, and it doubles as a handsome flowering tree each spring.