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  2. Growing raspberries and blackberries? Here's how to prune ...

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  3. Rubus glaucifolius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubus_glaucifolius

    Rubus glaucifolius is a North American species of wild raspberry known by the common name San Diego raspberry. It is native to Oregon and California, where it grows in mountain forests. [2] Rubus glaucifolius is a tangling shrub with very slender, lightly prickly stem spreading and branching outward. The leaves are each made up of usually three ...

  4. Rubus leucodermis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubus_leucodermis

    Rubus leucodermis is a deciduous shrub growing to 0.5–2.5 metres (1 + 1 ⁄ 2 –8 feet), with prickly shoots. [5] While the crown is perennial, the canes are biennial, growing vegetatively one year, flowering and fruiting the second, and then dying. As with other dark raspberries, the tips of the first-year canes (primocanes) often grow ...

  5. Rubus deliciosus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubus_deliciosus

    Rubus deliciosus is a North American species of flowering plant in the rose family Rosaceae, native to the United States. Common names include the delicious raspberry , [ 2 ] boulder raspberry , [ 3 ] Rocky Mountain raspberry [ 4 ] or snowy bramble .

  6. Warm spring means bigger and sweeter raspberries at start of ...

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  7. Raspberry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raspberry

    Red-fruited raspberries European Rubus idaeus raspberry fruits on the plant. The raspberry is the edible fruit of several plant species in the genus Rubus of the rose family, most of which are in the subgenus Idaeobatus. [1] The name also applies to these plants themselves. Raspberries are perennial with woody stems. [2]

  8. Growing season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Growing_season

    Map of average growing season length from "Geography of Ohio," 1923. A season is a division of the year marked by changes in weather, ecology, and the amount of daylight. The growing season is that portion of the year in which local conditions (i.e. rainfall, temperature, daylight) permit normal plant growth.

  9. Rubus glaucus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubus_glaucus

    Plants reach maturity and produce fruit after the first year extending through the rest of the plant's life which can be 12 to 20 years. [4] The plant grows best at temperatures between 12 and 19 °C, with relative humidity of 80 to 90%, high sunshine and well distributed rainfall between 800 and 2,500 mm a year.