Blueberries

Jul 27, 2010 19:35

News story here : Sales of blueberries have overtaken those of raspberries
is riddled with wrongness!

Britain is mostly on alkaline soil?  That'll be a surprise to all the specialist growers of rhododendrons and azaleas - and to all the people working to try to eliminate invasive wild rhodos from acidic British soils!   It surprised me, as I am ( Read more... )

apples, rant, berries, fruit, garden

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Comments 4

helflaed July 27 2010, 20:48:54 UTC
I think a lot of it boils down to the issue of shelf life.

I do find it sad that it is so hard to get hold of gooseberries etc though- I keep checking the local fruit and veg shops, but it is very rare to see them.

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bunn July 27 2010, 21:04:37 UTC
Now there's a plant that genuinely does have pest problems: sawfly is a nightmare on gooseberries. Last time I grew them I was picking catarpillars off literally twice a day in an attempt to keep enough leaves on to get them to berry.

Though I think that may have been a particularly vulnerable cultivar, and our local ecosystem was also screwed by the combined impact of hundreds of deeply suburban Cheshireites all squirting evil substances in all directions, so there weren't enough predators. Grrr.

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helflaed July 27 2010, 21:21:32 UTC
Strange- my Mother never had that problem in Cleethorpes. She had three bushes, all horribly spiky (and yes, I did have to help with the picking) with fairly small tart berries. I was never keen as a child, but I love them now.

I think she had to move them or some reason and they didn't survive the transplant.

I did manage to get some last year (the wholesaler delivering them asked "What are all them hairy grapes for"!) spent ages topping and tailing them- put some in the freezer, with the rest in the jam pan awaiting the evening when I could make it without the worry of boiling sugar+small children.

Then got a splitting migraine, had to go to bed and found out the next morning that they were all mouldy :(

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bunn July 28 2010, 10:57:23 UTC
We used to grow them when I was a child too, and didn't have the sawfly problem in Devon either - I have wondered if the variety I chose for my Cheshire garden was partly to blame :-(

I remember making endless jars of rather gluey gooseberry jam from our Devon berries, and they were moderately sweet too, a well ripened one could be eaten right off the bush.

Maybe I should give them another go...

Poot at the mouldy berries. Generally I think they last pretty well, sounds like you were unlucky there.

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