Do you have a personal recommendation for raspberry varieties?

I really like raspberries, but I can only grow them extensively. Therefore, I'm looking for robust raspberry varieties that, if possible, don't need to be tied up and that produce fruit over a longer period. Do you have any personal experience with this?

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Blumenacker
1 year ago

I still have an old variety: Nice man

It carries as summer strawberry mainly in June/July/August. I live in one of the warmest areas of Germany, sometimes they are already in June.
They can also be left to stand without attachment, but then the too long or weak rods should be somewhat crept so that they do not overhang and touch the ground.
Taste them – at least me – do well.
They can also be easily multiplied by excavation of young shoots.

If you also want to have raspberries, you can plant autumn strawberries at a separate site. The mature, depending on the location and depending on the variety, between July/August and September/October. In the field of acquiring gardens, Autumn Bliss or Himbo Top recommended.
(Source: BWagrar).

The taste of Himbo Top I could not test yet, because once a small experimental planting was completely eaten together by wreath mice in the first year
(Note at Himbo Top: Replication prohibited!)

Summer strawberries and autumn strawberries should be recognisably planted at separate sites because they must be cut at different times.

adianthum
1 year ago

So you can only prolong the carrying time of the fruit by planting different varieties. Within a variety still minimal over the location- but this varies by a maximum of one week.

Weather conditions also play a major role in carrying time.

The fruit ripe has its season and then end terrain. As with all fruit-seeds.

They remain vital as long as the soil gives it and you always cut out the fruit-bearing branches after the harvest. Raspberry carries on the two-year old branch so of the new shoots that hit the ground 3 max. 5 per plant stand for the next year. But since raspberries are very stressless, you don’t have to worry about it.

I’m about to. 15 years of getting a plant in the discounter, so I don’t know the name anymore. When moving 8 years ago, I took a couple of delegators and then, 3 years ago, put the fourth raspberry– Raspberry can not be enough! (Now I have too many!)

They are aromatic, growth- and fun-loving, can be freeze well, but you have to either fasten them up or shorten them like all raspberries. In the fruit season it is useful to support because they are otherwise on the ground – and they are not only popular with us people!

Working hours per bed and year approx. 2 x2 hours, once in spring, once in autumn. Without harvesting.

The first laid beet still carries as in the first year…carrying time approx. 4-6 weeks, depending on the weather, and of which the middle two weeks so much that I can freeze enough to come over the year – for dessert’s cake etc.

over the year spreads long wearing time, no care and, if possible, long standing

That would be like “the edifying wool milk sow”, unfortunately, there is not. But maybe in a couple of years, if the gene-basslers get a chance because it would be profitable.

And “no care” does not exist in plants anyway, just in cacti.

adianthum
1 year ago
Reply to  Rheinflip

They are robust. Raspberrys are generally very robust when the location is correct.

Actually, the stuff grows like weeds.

adianthum
1 year ago

I’ve looked at the variety descriptions of the other responders and would then assess the end rosadira as the closest to your ideas.

What I haven’t found is whether it is resistant to seizures/robust. But she’s got the longest time. But you still have to put it up and shorten it.

The Primeberry autumn is resistant/robust but has a shorter harvesting phase.

One of them can’t do anything you want.

Alexandra1410
1 year ago

I find the type Endrosadira very great and also rather robust. In any case more robust than Autum Bliss/First

douschka
1 year ago

I’m excited about my twotimer raspberries. They wear twice a year (from early summer and until frost), are robust, joyful and easy to care. Also abundant large, aromatic berries. They are cut in the early spring. They still need a planting skeleton as they get quite high. Have they built a rectangular frame made of roof slats, thus eliminating the connection. Some put posts, span several wire levels between them, where the shoots are “threaded”.