>>2734128Sorry for late answer, was busy.
I'm in zone 6B, that's really close, gonna just paste my list (in no particular order), pick whatever interests you (I have almost everything on this list) and I'll elaborate:
>Actinidia (hardy kiwi)>Serviceberry (there are many species of serviceberry from bushes to tall trees)>Blackthorn>Alpine strawberry>Cherry plum>Flowering quince>Quince>Honeyberry>Autumn olive>Goumi berry>Cornelian cherry>Nanking cherry>Elderberry>Aronia>Common medlar>Thornless blackberry>Sea buckthorn>Lingonberry >Cranberry>Gooseberry>Currants>Apple rose>Strawberry raspberry (Rubus illecebrosus)>Strawberry groundcherry (Physalis pruinosa)>Beach strawberry>Apricot>Nannyberry>Loquat >Asian pear>Chinese white pearWhile not strictly fruits there are also
>Rhubarb (great understory plant, it can live for over 10 years, it'll grow even in significantly shaded places however harvest will be significantly lower than under full sun, photo of rhubarbs in North-West corner of my property under tall pines, they manage here somehow and I can harvest quite a few every year)>Asparagus (can live for over 20 years)>Sunchoke (annual but will come back from tubers every year, be careful with it, it spreads a lot and is hard to get rid of once established, taste similar to potatoes but more refreshing, pretty flowers in Autumn)>Chinese yam (meh, honestly not worth it imo)>>2734722Mine nanking cherries are doing poorly, they are small and still lost a lot of their already small branches overwinter.
They have been in the ground for 2 years already with little growth.
Place I planted them is somewhat shaded but I water them if it gets dry, also fertilized them and gave them rooting compound and it didn't help.
Unless they get better I'll replace them at some point.