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Article Series: Organic Gardening
Organic
Gardening Tips & Advice
Which
Organic Berries Should I Grow?
Growing organic berries is a very popular
choice for most organic gardeners, especially in climates with
good rainfall. Berries are mostly hardy and will grow without
need of pesticides or chemical fertilizers, making them a great
choice for the larger organic garden.
To suit the spirit of the organic garden, choose
berries that are native to your country or a similar climate, and keep as
close as possible to the wild variety. Many cultivated varieties
have been hybridized to produce large crops of heavy, watery
fruit which means more profits for the large-scale grower but
has very little of the flavor of the wild fruit. Stay away
from these commercial varieties where you can.
Blackberry
Thorny wild blackberry bushes grow so well in the right climate
that many people struggle to keep brambles out of their gardens.
This is a very invasive plant and once introduced it is hard
to control, with long trailing branches and far-spreading suckers.
The cultivated blackberry is almost thornless and non-invasive
but the fruit does not have the same sharp sweet flavor.
Blueberry
Choose your variety carefully - there are many of them, and
some are much more flavorsome than others. The two main strains
of blueberry are Highbush (growing to about 6 ft tall) and
Rabbiteye, but within each of those categories there are several
different varieties. Highbush types will do better in cooler
climates with regular frosts. Rabbiteye can handle hotter drier
summers and heavier, less acid soil.
You can expect a small crop from the second year, steadily
increasing until year five onward when the bush is mature.
At that time it will start to need annual pruning.
Blueberries can also produce a wonderful display of fall colors.
Take this into account when you are selecting your site.
Cranberry
The cranberry is a very nutritious, sour-tasting fruit with
well-documented health benefits especially for urinary tract
infections. It needs acidic, peaty soil. Like strawberries,
cranberries grow close to the ground. The fruit makes good
jelly, and you can also add it to juices, smoothies and desserts.
Chilean Cranberry
Despite its name, this plant is not related to the cranberry.
It grows as an evergreen shrub producing a good crop of small
sweet red berries with a flavor similar to strawberries. It
is hardy, surviving frost well. It could make a very productive,
delicious and unusual addition to your organic garden. Planting
several bushes in a row will create a decorative low hedge.
The Chilean cranberry has many different common names including
uni, murta and murtilla in Chile (its native country), New
Zealand cranberry or tazziberry in Australasia, and Chilean
guava. Look for the botanical names Ugni molinae, Myrtus ugni
and Eugenia ugni.
Currants
Black currants, red currants and white currants all grow as
bushes. They are very nutritious fruit with black currants
in particular containing high levels of vitamin C.
Black currant bushes are not attractive and do not respond
well to pruning, but the fruit has a stronger taste. Red and
white currants can be pruned, even into a shaped topiary display,
although topiary could look a little out of place in an organic
garden.
The long sprigs of red fruit make the red currant very attractive
at harvest time. White currants are more unusual. If you have
enough space, mix red and white currant bushes, or even all
three. The resulting fruit will make a delicious, healthy and
very attractive mixture of berries.
Gooseberry
Gooseberry bushes were once a popular feature of many gardens
in England but with the increase in other sweeter imported
berries they are becoming less common. They can be an acid
fruit unless picked very ripe, so home-grown gooseberries that
you can eat right away are much better than store-bought. They
are usually green but some varieties are almost yellow when
ripe. There is also a red variety.
Raspberry
Raspberries are grown on canes and require a lot of care but
will pay you back well with large crops of delicious fruit.
There are several varieties, each suited to a different climate,
so take advice on what is best for your garden. Expect to spend
time tying branches, dealing with suckers, mulching, watering
and getting scratched.
Raspberries will not flourish near plants of the nightshade
family (potatoes, tomatoes, eggplants or peppers) or in soil
where those plants have been grown in the last couple years.
Strawberry
The wild strawberry is a tiny fruit with a strong, intensely
sweet flavor that can grow well in sunny, rocky, well-drained
sites, for example between the stones of a path.
Cultivated strawberries require more work but can produce
a lot of fruit. For an organic garden you will probably want
an old variety such as Captain Cook with medium to small sized
flavorsome berries, closer to wild strawberries than the huge
watery fruit that we often find in stores.
Managing Berries In Your Garden
Birds love most varieties of berries and will steal them before
they ripen so if you want a good crop, you will have to cover
your bushes with net while the berries are ripening. Strawberries
are especially vulnerable and you may want to enclose them
in a bird-proof cage.
When planting, choose your sites with care. Most berries prefer
a sunny spot to ripen and develop their fullest flavor. You
will want a place that is sheltered without being in constant
shade. Do not plant bushes too close to a fence or hedge -
you will need to be able to get all around them to harvest
your growing organic berries, without being scratched to pieces! # # # # #
SolveYourProblem.com
: 2008
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