Allotment Gardening Advice Help Chat

Growing => Grow Your Own => Topic started by: 240173paul on October 08, 2014, 20:11

Title: Raspberries
Post by: 240173paul on October 08, 2014, 20:11
I am thinking of moving my raspberry canes into the fruit section of the allotment ;)  What was a row has now turned into a meter wide hedge, which allows no air, poor fruit and a pain to pick unless you have the ability to levitate!  So, the million dollar question is

Has anyone contained the canes roots by planting in pots, root barrier or any other ways and still had successful raspberries??

Many thanks in advance for all suggestions
Title: Re: Raspberries
Post by: mumofstig on October 08, 2014, 20:21
Mine are in a narrow bed with grass paths either side - so the runners get mowed off, which stops any spread  ;)
Title: Re: Raspberries
Post by: solway cropper on October 08, 2014, 22:34
Mine are grown along the boundary between mine and the neighbour's garden. On my side I dug a trench and buried a length of fascia board into it. No stray rasps on my side but they keep popping up in my neighbour's lawn as much as 2m from the fence.
Title: Re: Raspberries
Post by: sunshineband on October 09, 2014, 08:00
Mine managed to escape the edging of the bed, but I guess I just didn't bury it deep enough --- see Solway Cropper's post above -- but I usually manage to control them as they pop up in the bark path. Not too much of a problem really.

The occasional blighter finds it way under the path and into adjoining beds, so this year for example, the carrots and the potatoes both had a largish cane in them. I wait until it is big enough to grab and pull it out, holding really low down. Usually works  :D
Title: Re: Raspberries
Post by: Nobbie on October 09, 2014, 09:35
Mine are grown along the boundary between mine and the neighbour's garden. On my side I dug a trench and buried a length of fascia board into it. No stray rasps on my side but they keep popping up in my neighbour's lawn as much as 2m from the fence.

I used UPVC Facia board as well, either side of a 18" bed and it worked well. I think mine was 12" facia board with just the top showing.
Title: Re: Raspberries
Post by: JayG on October 09, 2014, 09:49
I used spare PVC pond liner to create a vertical soil barrier about 12" deep. It more or less works but something like corrugated plastic would have been easier to work with and 15-18" deep would probably stop the more determined suckers which still occasionally find their way under it.

Also true that with no barrier they can sucker up at least 6' from the parent plant - I have to pull out suckers from my delphinium bed from time to time which is about that distance away from the nearest rasp, although if you catch them early enough they're quite easy to pull out and don't try again for a while (or for about as long as you remember to keep checking for them!  :nowink:)
Title: Re: Raspberries
Post by: jaydig on October 09, 2014, 09:51
Raspberry runners are so prolific it makes one wonder why they're so expensive to buy, doesn't it. I must pull out a couple of hundred pounds' worth of runners every season.
Title: Re: Raspberries
Post by: gypsy on October 09, 2014, 10:42
Last year I ripped the raspberries out as they had not been doing very well. I was given some new ones and planted them in a bath, they have not done very well, very few small fruits.The ones I ripped out and threw onto the rubbish pile have got the best raspberries I have ever seen.
Title: Re: Raspberries
Post by: mumofstig on October 09, 2014, 13:46
 :lol:  :lol: Typical  :nowink:
Title: Re: Raspberries
Post by: LotuSeed on October 09, 2014, 14:54
Gotta watch and make sure the canes don't get so long that they end up tip rooting too  :tongue2:
Title: Re: Raspberries
Post by: Lesleyk on October 09, 2014, 20:44
Has anyone contained the canes roots by planting in pots, root barrier or any other ways and still had successful raspberries??

I used to work in a nursery where we grew raspberries in large pots and they seemed to thrive.  The pots were in rows with wire lines alongside to tie them to as they grew.  Each year we would cut them back, exactly as you would in the garden, and in the spring they would come away again, with a top dressing of new compost and a bit of feed.  Don't know if this helps, but I guess it proves that, in this case at least, they didn't mind having their roots contained.