Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Blackberries
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We have thorn less blackberries and while some turn black a lot have red on them and never turn ripe. This has been going on for years, new canes come up every year and I wonder if the type I have just need to be replaced.
When we've harvested our thornless blackberries, the "plug" or end-stem remains in the berry. Does that mean it's not quite ripe yet, too hot, not enough water? When I cook those berries, the white "plug" gets hard and they need to be fished out of the cooked berries.
No, that is simply a quirk of blackberries! Blackberries retain the core when they come off the stem, whereas raspberries do not. This is one easy way to tell the berries apart at a glance!
We have a blackberry patch behind our house. The neighborhood deer herd seems to love them and have decided they wanted a front yard patch. The deer manage the backyard patch and now I know how to better manage the front. The birds have also contributed to the front yard patch by dropping seeds in my yew trees. Our four legged and winged farmhands also manage our strawberry patches.
The irony, my husband and I don't like blackberries. We do like strawberries.
Blackberries will certainly grow from seeds dropped by birds. The plants send out new suckers from their roots that can pop up anywhere. Some people may like this if they have a homestead; for others, they won’t want the blackberries to spread everywhere and they will need to prune and pull those suckers to keep the blackberries in control (and direct the energy to bigger fruit).
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