I'm not talking about Royal Sovereign strawberry or Lloyd George raspberry, which are very old indeed and well before my time.
But does anyone else find that just a few of the very best older varieties outperform the modern and much-hyped ones?
I have an old raspberry, probably from the 1970s or earlier. It's far outperforming Autumn Bliss, although it takes a break between the summer and autumn crops which I'll need to fil with another one. It's also doing OK in this drought without added water so far, although it would prefer to be in a less sunny location.
I have an old strawberry, possibly Talisman. For a gardener, it's level with or ahead of all the modern varieties I've tried. Especially for those who use it as rampant edible ground cover, because it makes hundreds of runners.
Symphony may have as good a flavour, and has firmer fruit. But it seems to crop poorly on plants over about two years old. It makes very few runners either, so no use for ground cover.
It doesn't seem to like the drought either. Talisman, or whatever it is, is doing fine and in this weather the fruit has almost no slug damage.
Does anyone know how I might identify them both? To be this good, they're surely past commercial varieties. If I could find a picture of Talisman, that might confirm it.
But does anyone else find that just a few of the very best older varieties outperform the modern and much-hyped ones?
I have an old raspberry, probably from the 1970s or earlier. It's far outperforming Autumn Bliss, although it takes a break between the summer and autumn crops which I'll need to fil with another one. It's also doing OK in this drought without added water so far, although it would prefer to be in a less sunny location.
I have an old strawberry, possibly Talisman. For a gardener, it's level with or ahead of all the modern varieties I've tried. Especially for those who use it as rampant edible ground cover, because it makes hundreds of runners.
Symphony may have as good a flavour, and has firmer fruit. But it seems to crop poorly on plants over about two years old. It makes very few runners either, so no use for ground cover.
It doesn't seem to like the drought either. Talisman, or whatever it is, is doing fine and in this weather the fruit has almost no slug damage.
Does anyone know how I might identify them both? To be this good, they're surely past commercial varieties. If I could find a picture of Talisman, that might confirm it.
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