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  2. Raspberry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raspberry

    Purple raspberries have been produced by horticultural hybridization of red and black raspberries, and have also been found in the wild in a few places (for example, in Vermont) where the American red and the black raspberries both grow naturally. Commercial production of purple-fruited raspberries is rare.

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

    www.aol.com/growing-raspberries-blackberries...

    Home & Garden. Medicare. News

  4. Rubus ellipticus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubus_ellipticus

    Ainselu (Golden Himalayan Raspberry) from Nepal. The golden Himalayan raspberry is a large shrub with stout stems that can grow to up to 4.5 metres (15 ft) long. Its leaves are trifoliate, elliptic, or obovate and toothed with long bristles. Its leaves can grow 5 to 10 cm (2 to 4 in) long.

  5. Rubus probus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubus_probus

    Rubus probus, commonly known as Atherton raspberry or wild raspberry, is a scrambling shrub in the family Rosaceae native to Malesia and Queensland. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Atherton raspberry is a rampant grower and, like most Rubus species, can form dense thorny thickets. [ 4 ]

  6. Tayberry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tayberry

    The tayberry (Rubus fruticosus × R. idaeus) is a cultivated shrub in the genus Rubus of the family Rosaceae patented in 1979 as a cross between a blackberry and a red raspberry, and named after the River Tay in Scotland. The fruit is sweeter, much larger, and more aromatic than that of the loganberry, itself a blackberry and red raspberry ...

  7. Multiple fruit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_fruit

    In contrast, an aggregate fruit such as a raspberry develops from multiple ovaries of a single flower. In languages other than English, the meanings of "multiple" and "aggregate" fruit are reversed, so that multiple fruits merge several pistils within a single flower. [4]

  8. Loganberry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loganberry

    The vines or canes of the Loganberry grow entirely unlike either the blackberry or raspberry. They trail or grow upon the ground more like the dewberry. They are exceedingly strong growers, each shoot or branch reaching a growth of eight to ten feet in one season without irrigation, the aggregate growth of all the shoots on one plant amounting ...

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

    www.aol.com/warm-spring-means-bigger-sweeter...

    Growers say the season has begun with 65% more British raspberries on supermarket shelves compared to the same period last year.

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