Raspberry problem

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Posted by Kathy on September 1, 2011, 5:13 pm
 
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Two years ago, we bought six raspberry bushes for the lottie - 3 summer
fruiting and 3 autumn fruiting.  They arrived at the wrong time [for us] and
got heeled into the nursery bed for the winter, autumns closest to the path,
summer closest to the fence.

Last spring my plot partner planted them in two beds.  When I asked which
were which, she looked blank, then admitted she'd planted the three
strongest looking in one bed and the other three in the other one.  Last
summer/autumn they didn't do much.

This year, I thought I'd be able to sort them out by when they started
fruiting.  Not a bit of it!  Apart from one which is still thinking about
sticking around, they all started fruiting at once and are still going
strong.

My problem is, how do I prune them?  As they have all [bar the still
thinking one] produced lots of new growth this year, should I treat them all
as summer fruiting?

--
Kathy


--
Kathy



Posted by Dave Hill on September 2, 2011, 4:09 am
 
Cut out the old growth and leave in the new to fruit next year

Posted by Baz on September 2, 2011, 8:42 am
 

Is that true of both summer and autumn fruiters? I am unsure but autumn
ones need to be cut off 3" above ground because they fruit on new canes,
and summer ones fruit on last years canes?

I need to know this too. I have ordered both summer and autumn varieties.
Glen Cova, Malling Jewel and Tulameen.

Baz











Posted by Jake on September 2, 2011, 10:01 am
 

An easy rule of thumb is to chop to ground level any cane that has
fruited immediately it finishes fruiting but don't cut any that have
not fruited unless they are very weak or diseased. As the autumn
fruiters won't have produced new canes at that point you can't go
wrong. Some people prefer to leave the autumn fruiting canes in place
through the winter for some reason but if you do this, make sure they
are chopped down no later than January.

Tulameen's a good choice. Crops well for a long time and IMO really
tasty fruits. I think it actually produces too many new canes each
year - I've only got so much space - so I tend to work on the basis
that when I cut out an old cane, I tie the best available new one in
its place and when I've done this with all the old ones, I remove the
surplus.


Cheers
Jake
==============================================
Gardening at the dry end (east) of Swansea Bay
in between reading anything by JRR Tolkien.

www.rivendell.org.uk

Posted by Baz on September 2, 2011, 10:17 am
 4ax.com:


I think I need to give some thought to this one. For some reason, I feel
confused. Not your fault.

Baz