Have you picked your first blackberries yet? Down here in the south-east of England, where we’re enjoying a really super summer (apologies to all those in the rest of Britain who’ve been washed out (again)), blackberries started ripening around three weeks ago.
And, thanks to a garden experiment I began a couple of years ago, we're enjoying the bounty. For years, we’ve hacked back all brambles without question. Then, hacking yet again at a particularly powerful shoot that resurrected itself, no matter how often I cut it down, I deliberated this (literally) fruitless activity. Why not give it its head?
Most brambles, especially in shade, are weedy, spindly growths that, in my experience, will never produce decent fruit. But this was a powerful stem in full sunshine and a sheltered position. So, in the face of fierce family opposition I let it grow.
Last year it bore well but this year we have a fruit harvest writ large. Pints of blackberries have ripened already, with plenty more to come. Part of the bush is even still in flower. (It’s a funny year.) And the blackberries themselves are enormous – bigger than anything I’ve picked in the wild, although it is itself a wild bush. My only problem is how to prune it.
Often advice is to train blackberry stems according to their age: in one direction one year, the opposite direction the next year. Fruit is produced on two-year-old canes, which is why you should keep the current year’s growth separate. Fruited canes are pruned out from the base after harvesting, and the year’s new fruits are trained in their place.
As usual, one of the excellent US Extension Colleges - this time belonging to Oregon State University - gives full instructions on dealing with blackberries. The diagram above shows the current year's growth (primocanes) laid out on the ground, with the fruiting canes (floricanes) having been tied in the previous autumn. They also give instructions on light pruning of the primocanes.
The RHS website does it differently, suggesting bundling new canes together along upper wires, then retraining them on lower wires, once the fruited canes have been removed from them (sounds harder work!).
But my bush, shaped in a hummock, has nothing so tidy about it. The RHS website warns: “If you don’t have somewhere to train these berries, they will quickly grow out of control and be harder to prune and less productive.”
I admit it’s only just under control. I foresee a lot a scratched flesh this autumn as I try to sort out the different canes. Still the council just hacks wild bushes back year after year and they continue to fruit, so I guess we don’t have to be too prissy about it.
So, if you have a bramble that just won’t go away, why not give it a chance and take advantage of Nature's bounty? And if you've given this a go, click on comment below and let us know how it's gone.
I have a sunny hillside near my work that is covered with wild brambles. Every winter I spend part of a day pruning back old canes and taming a walk through maze out of them. A little bit of cheap fertilizer (chicken poo based)at the base of the bunch every spring and come summer there are enough berries for lots of pickers to harvest. They are all good sized fruit with a better taste than the thornless vines I have at my house.
Posted by: Lanny | Saturday, 21 February 2015 at 06:50 AM
We just bought 10 acres of land and along the driveway we just put in are a lot of blackberry plants. I haven't seen any berries on them. Should I cut it all back to give it a "fresh start" and just wait a year or 2 for the berries to come back?
Posted by: Casey | Friday, 17 July 2015 at 09:06 PM
Difficult to know exactly what the situation is, Casey. When you say let the berries "come back" do you mean the bushes were cut back to accommodate the drive. If so, I'd just leave them to come back next year.
Posted by: Helen | Thursday, 23 July 2015 at 04:51 PM
She has had any berries on them yet, she stated they had just planted them?
Posted by: Sharon | Saturday, 22 August 2015 at 09:09 AM
Sorry predictive text. She has not had any berries grow yet.
Posted by: Sharon | Saturday, 22 August 2015 at 09:10 AM
I think the plants were already there; it's the driveway that's new.
Posted by: Helen | Monday, 24 August 2015 at 08:08 AM