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Produce => Edible Plants => Topic started by: mummybunny on October 19, 2008, 22:31:55

Title: Confussed
Post by: mummybunny on October 19, 2008, 22:31:55
 :-\

Its not that hard to confuse me i know but something has got me stumped! I popped into Cadbury garden centre to price up a raspberry bush £15.99 for a large what i would call a pruned bush. I've came home to check on prices online and all i can find are canes? Just looks like a twig to me!!

Really dont know what i should be planting! I dont want a lot thought a nice big Half barrel pot with one of the ones i saw in cadbury garden centre would be good!! I heard that they like a lot of root space?
again not very good at this technical lingo!!

Sorry if its a silly question just really has me scratching my head!

Thanks lucy.

Title: Re: Confussed
Post by: caroline7758 on October 19, 2008, 22:37:10
Canes are fine, and MUCH cheaper! Yes, they look like twigs at this time of year, but you'll be amazed at how they grow- you should get fruit next year. Now is a good time to plant them.
Title: Re: Confussed
Post by: Flighty on October 19, 2008, 22:53:09
I bought nine canes for that little more than that price this time last year! I lost two and had fruit off the rest of them this year.
This website may be of use
http://www.gardenaction.co.uk/fruit_veg_diary/fruit_veg_mini_project_january_2_raspberry.aspwebsite
Title: Re: Confussed
Post by: Flighty on October 19, 2008, 22:56:57
Sorry the link doesn't work! Maybe this does
http://www.gardenaction.co.uk/fruit_veg_diary/fruit_veg_mini_project_january_2a_raspberry.asp
Title: Re: Confussed
Post by: kt. on October 19, 2008, 23:05:52
I planted 8 raspberry canes at 12-18" tall in February.  Cost me £5.  They are all now around 5ft tall with loads of fruit.
Title: Re: Confussed
Post by: alipally on October 20, 2008, 06:05:11
Canes are fine but I have found growing autumn-fruiting raspberries  (primocane) much easier to grow as you just prune them right down after fruiting ready for the next year.  With spring and summer fruiting ones (floricane) they fruit the following year so you have to leave the new shoots on and prune the old wood back.  If you are as easily confused as me I'd stick to autumn ones, some of mine started fruiting in July anyway.  I didn't know any of this and bought spring, summer and autumn fruiting ones but I wish I had stuck to just primocanes.
Title: Re: Confussed
Post by: caroline7758 on October 20, 2008, 09:56:29
I'll second that! My autmn rasps started fruiting in August, barely need any support and I have never even put any protection over them and still had a bumper crop this year.
Title: Re: Confussed
Post by: Kea on October 20, 2008, 10:17:11
I grow both and I have to say that in the second year the summer ones have the edge over the autumn ones for flavour and size and possibly quality. I don't have a problem with losing much to the birds, blackcurrants are a different story you've got to cover them on my site.
Title: Re: Confussed
Post by: manicscousers on October 20, 2008, 10:56:34
never heard of a raspberry bush, apart from the flowering type, all ours are from canes
Title: Re: Confussed
Post by: mummybunny on October 21, 2008, 10:45:07
Thanks,

Didnt want to look like a plonker asking in the garden centre at least you cant see me going red lol  :-[

lucy
Title: Re: Confussed
Post by: Kea on October 21, 2008, 11:32:34
Well to be fair it's not obvious if you've never grown raspberries before and I noticed my local garden centre 'tries it on' by selling raspberry bushes singularly in the summer at the price they sell 10 canes for in the autumn.
Title: Re: Confussed
Post by: Hyacinth on October 21, 2008, 19:16:57
Went into my local Wyvales this morning and at first glance the canes certainly did look like a bush ;) Closer inspection found them to be several varieties of berries all planted in the same pot - might you have seen something similar, I wonder, Lucy?
Title: Re: Confussed
Post by: hopalong on October 22, 2008, 12:15:24
I've got both types of cane, planted a year ago.  Both have flourished within a year and the autumn ones have fruited very much better (from August) and not been eaten at all by birds, but it is true that their taste and texture is not as good as the summer ones.