Raspberries in my garden

  • 6 Replies
  • 1823 Views
*

Ben_H

  • Experienced Member
  • ***
  • Location: Bedford
  • 199
Raspberries in my garden
« on: August 15, 2011, 07:36 »
I have a small fruit patch in the garden which due to a young family, dogs, chickens and an allotment I am trying to keep as low maintenance as possible. What I would like to do is lay mypex weed matting around the fruit bushes and cover in woodchip as I have a real problem with nettles and other weeds growing through from under my neighbours fence.

If I do this how much space should I leave around the bottom of the raspberry bushes to allow for natural growth from the base of the plants and to be able to remove suckers?

*

sunshineband

  • Global Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Location: Reading, Berkshire
  • 32056
  • Tallest Sunflower prizewinner 2014
    • A Little Bit of Sunshine
Re: Raspberries in my garden
« Reply #1 on: August 15, 2011, 07:38 »
I personally would not have membrane around the raspberries, but only the woodchip. They can come up a couple of feet or so away from the original plant, and although it is easy to remove unwanted ones, I reckon lots would get trapped  :D
Wisdom is knowing what to ignore - be comfortable in your own skin.
My Blog
My Diary
My Diary Comments

*

Ben_H

  • Experienced Member
  • ***
  • Location: Bedford
  • 199
Re: Raspberries in my garden
« Reply #2 on: August 15, 2011, 08:15 »
That's fine by me as less mypex to buy. What about round gooseberries, red/black currants and blueberries?

*

mumofstig

  • Global Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Location: Kent
  • 57964
Re: Raspberries in my garden
« Reply #3 on: August 15, 2011, 09:21 »
I think they'd be fine with the membrane, as they don't sucker  :)

*

operabunny

  • Experienced Member
  • ***
  • Location: Bristol
  • 247
Re: Raspberries in my garden
« Reply #4 on: August 15, 2011, 22:40 »
Tell that to my red gooseberry! It clearly doesn't know the rules!

This is fine by me, though,  as I get free plants ;)

*

sarajane

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Location: Chester
  • 1279
Re: Raspberries in my garden
« Reply #5 on: August 15, 2011, 23:14 »
When I replanted my raspberries several years ago I surrounded the plantds with thick cardboard to stop the weeds, mainly bindweed and then covered with wood chips to hold the cardboard down.

The raspberries have multiplied so well they now need thinning out  again and the weeds have been minimal.

By the time the cardboard has deteriorated enough to let the plants spread the weeds have given up the ghost  Success I think

*

sunshineband

  • Global Moderator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Location: Reading, Berkshire
  • 32056
  • Tallest Sunflower prizewinner 2014
    • A Little Bit of Sunshine
Re: Raspberries in my garden
« Reply #6 on: August 16, 2011, 19:44 »
Tell that to my red gooseberry! It clearly doesn't know the rules!

This is fine by me, though,  as I get free plants ;)

I've gained a gooseberry bush as it layered itself and rooted well  :D :D :D

Luckily it fould a spot where the thick layer of leaf mulch had exposed some nice damp soil  :lol:



xx
what would you do with raspberries?

Started by gazza975526570 on Grow Your Own

6 Replies
1419 Views
Last post March 12, 2012, 08:27
by brown thumb
xx
Raspberries

Started by mumofstig on Grow Your Own

6 Replies
2693 Views
Last post January 30, 2009, 21:36
by sclarke624
xx
Raspberries gone

Started by chrisnchris on Grow Your Own

2 Replies
1340 Views
Last post July 02, 2014, 08:45
by chrisnchris
xx
Raspberries - what to do?

Started by Libby on Grow Your Own

2 Replies
1300 Views
Last post December 07, 2008, 13:20
by Libby
 

Page created in 0.304 seconds with 41 queries.

Powered by SMFPacks Social Login Mod
Powered by SMFPacks SEO Pro Mod |