Summer
Harvest and Care of Raspberries
by Melinda Myers
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[July 28, 2021]
Easy care raspberries are high in fiber and
Vitamin C, making them a healthy snack as well as delicious in jams,
jellies, and desserts. Enjoy the best flavor and reduce pest
problems with proper harvesting and summer care.
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Pick raspberries when the fruit is firm but soft,
deeply colored, and easily slides off the hard core. Check your
raspberry patch and harvest every few days to avoid overripe fruit
that attracts picnic beetles and other pests. Consider wearing long
pants and a long sleeve shirt for protection against the thorns and
mosquitoes.
Place berries in shallow containers when harvesting and storing to
avoid crushing the delicate fruit. Chill any uneaten berries within
two hours of harvesting to preserve the freshness and flavor. Wait
to wash berries until right before use to further lengthen their
storage life.
Once the summer harvest is complete, it is time to do a bit of
pruning. Remove the canes that bore the summer fruit back to ground
level. These canes will not form fruit in future years. Removing
them now gives new canes room to grow and reduces the risk of
disease.
This is also a good time to check all canes for signs of disease
problems. Look for sunken and discolored areas, cankers, and
spotted, yellow or brown leaves. These symptoms along with dry
crumbly fruit are clues disease, like anthracnose and spur blight
have moved into your raspberry patch. Remove and destroy diseased
canes to ground level as soon as they are found. This is often
enough to manage these diseases.
Summer is also a good time to thin the remaining canes on summer
bearing raspberries. Remove weak or damaged canes, leaving three or
four of the sturdiest per foot of row or six or eight stems per hill
when growing in the hill system.
Wait until next spring to reduce the height of the remaining canes.
At that time, you can determine winter dieback and damage and prune
accordingly.
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Fall bearing raspberries are handled a bit
differently. Prune them like the summer bearing raspberries to
harvest two crops in one season. Often called everbearing, these
produce a summer crop on second year canes and fall crop on first
year canes.
Make pruning easier and benefit from an earlier,
larger fall harvest by managing fall bearing raspberries with one
pruning. Cut or mow all the canes to ground level once the plants
are dormant and before growth begins in spring. This pruning
technique eliminates the summer crop but is much easier, less time
consuming, and eliminates any animal and winter damage in just one
cut.
Consider planting a summer and a fall bearing raspberry patch to
maximize the harvest. You’ll enjoy summer raspberries from one
planting plus a larger, earlier harvest from your fall bearing
raspberries when pruning all the canes to ground level each year.
Grab your favorite berry harvest basket, dress appropriately and
head to your raspberry patch. With every bite of
fresh-from-the-garden raspberry or homemade raspberry treat you will
be glad you took the time to plant, tend and harvest your own.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including
The Midwest Gardener’s Handbook and Small Space Gardening. She hosts
The Great Courses ”How to Grow Anything” DVD series and the
nationally-syndicated Melinda’s Garden Moment TV & radio program.
Myers is a columnist and contributing editor for Birds & Blooms
magazine. Her web site is www.MelindaMyers.com.
[Photo courtesy of MelindaMyers.com] |