Posted by Alistair Macdonald on October 4, 2006, 9:39 am
After a rather indifferent harvest due presumably to the drought, I cut back
my Autumn Bliss raspberries to ground level as advised and as always every
year. Since then (early September) new growth has reached a height of over a
foot and is still flourishing. Should I again cut it back or allow it to
wither with the winter?
Alistair
Posted by Mary on October 4, 2006, 7:55 pm
On Wed, 4 Oct 2006 14:39:43 +0100, "Alistair Macdonald"
>After a rather indifferent harvest due presumably to the drought, I cut back
>my Autumn Bliss raspberries to ground level as advised and as always every
>year. Since then (early September) new growth has reached a height of over a
>foot and is still flourishing. Should I again cut it back or allow it to
>wither with the winter?
>Alistair
How long have they been established?
Posted by johannes on October 6, 2006, 7:46 am
Alistair Macdonald wrote:
>
> After a rather indifferent harvest due presumably to the drought, I cut back
> my Autumn Bliss raspberries to ground level as advised and as always every
> year. Since then (early September) new growth has reached a height of over a
> foot and is still flourishing. Should I again cut it back or allow it to
> wither with the winter?
> Alistair
Your replies didn't get through because it was redirected by the follow-up
addressing to several uk.local groups. It's done by a sick usenet vandal.
He will reply to a post with a simple question and then redirects replies
to the uk.local groups. From here, they can't easily be traced back, since
he always omit the group he was posing from. To entice replies, he often
uses a name of a known member of the group, but of course with a different
email address. Always check if there is a follow-up address in the post.
>my Autumn Bliss raspberries to ground level as advised and as always every
>year. Since then (early September) new growth has reached a height of over a
>foot and is still flourishing. Should I again cut it back or allow it to
>wither with the winter?
>Alistair