A vigorous, late-summer cropping cultivar, producing a good yield of large, well-flavoured fruit over a long season
Position
Soil Types
Max Height
1.5-2.5 metres
Max Spread
0.1-0.5 metres
A vigorous, late-summer cropping cultivar, producing a good yield of large, well-flavoured fruit over a long season
1.5-2.5 metres
0.1-0.5 metres
| Season | Stem | Flower | Foliage | Fruit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spring | ||||
| Summer | ||||
| Autumn | ||||
| Winter |
Grow in an acidic or neutral soil and mulch with acidic material such as composted bark. Train raspberries in rows between parallel wires for support. May have the potential to become a nuisance if not managed well. See raspberry cultivation
Propagate by division in the dormant season. Lift new canes along with their rootballs. Choose only newly planted, disease-free stock from which to propagate
Remove all fruited canes down to ground level in early to mid autumn. Train in new growth
May be susceptible to aphids, leafhoppers, raspberry beetle and gall mites
May be susceptible to grey moulds and honey fungus (rarely)
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