I planted a couple in pots but the squirrels have completely stripped them so I need to start again. Is it ok to start them off at this time of year? They are autumn fruiting raspberries.
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Is it too late to plant raspberry canes?
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You can plant raspberry canes at any time of year.
Autumn fruiters will crop in their first autumn after planting, but summer fruiters will not usually crop in their first year.
Summer fruiters crop on woody stems which grew the previous season but autumn fruiters crop on young green shoots and on older woody canes (if left unpruned)..
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Originally posted by rustylady View PostWhen you say start again, do you mean buy new plants? You say the squirrels have stripped your others, but if the roots are still alive they should regrow come Spring.
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Originally posted by rustylady View PostWhen you say start again, do you mean buy new plants? You say the squirrels have stripped your others, but if the roots are still alive they should regrow come Spring.
Will squirrels actually eat the prickly stems of raspberries?
I've never heard of it before, but there's a first time for everything (hence why I didn't question "death by squirrel".
I've had squirrels eat the flowers of my crocus in spring, and I've often seen squirrels strip bark from trees, but eating raspberry canes?
Tomato-Head: can you post a picture?.
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Originally posted by FB. View PostWill squirrels actually eat the prickly stems of raspberries?
they are in 40cm pots.
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Older raspberry canes often go dry, brittle and flaky.
I'm no fan of squirrels, but the squirrels may only be guilty of digging; the appearance of the canes might just be their natural "aged" look.
Raspberries come back from quite substantial root systems, and some squirrel damage to the roots probably won't kill the plants unless the squirrels manage to break off the soft new shoots which will be emerging from roots a couple of inches down and slowly making their way up to the surface at this time of year - just like spring bulbs.
Even then, any damaged raspberries will usually try to grow new shoots at least one more time before they run out of energy.
So don't give up on them; most, if not all, have a chance to recover - even if they don't come back to life it might be that the plants died from something else. Raspberries would definitely be much happier in open ground with a decent compost mulch each year.
In a pot, the soil will soon become depleted by vigorous hungry feeders such as raspberries (and the roots can't explore outside the confined pot to search for what they need). Not to mention the problem of keeping them adequately watered in hot dry summer weather (again, the roots can't explore for water if confined to a pot).
Soft berry-type fruits are the first to start suffering if the soil is losing fertility or doesn't have the right moisture balance.
I would say that if you want to keep raspberries permanently in pots and maintain their productivity, they'll need re-potting into fresh compost every couple of years, and maybe splitting when re-potted.
My raspberries are such hungry feeders that I can either grown them in raw compost (like potatoes!) or water them with pure urine about once every couple of weeks and they don't suffer the "fertiliser scorch" which makes the leaves of many other plants wilt and die from over-feeding.
On the other hand, my young Golden Harvey MM111 apple tree is particularly sensitive to any fertilising at all; it prefers to be left unfertilised in poor soil. Strange but true..
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