These Raspberry Long Canes are a great opportunity for you to benefit from a huge breakthrough in Raspberry fruit production. Usually producing the fruits on the previous year’s growth of canes, these long new canes will provide you with a fantastic crop of delicious raspberries in the first season. They are a great garden variety of that are not too vigorous. They will fruit from august to September producing sweet, bright red berries. Perfect for growing in large pots and containers in a wigwam form, but if space is limited plant them in rows roughly 60cm (2ft) apart. Delivered as 5 x Raspberry Long Canes, ready to plant out from January to May.
Care Guide
Planting Advice for Raspberries:
- Plant raspberries roughly 50cm apart in rows, along walls or fences or in beds where further support from posts can be used.
- They can also be grown in large pots (40cm+ diameter) on your patio, balcony, terrace and more.
- Select an appropriate spot for your plants, making sure that you give them enough space to grow to their full size.
- For best results, plant in a sunny but sheltered position.
- Soak canes in water for a couple of hours before planting to wake them up from dormancy.
- Dig a hole with enough room for the roots to spread. If you?re planting multiple bushes, it?s easiest to dig a trench.
- Whether you?re planting bare-root or potted plants, keep the crown of the plant 1 or 2 inches above the ground – raspberries hate to be buried too deeply.
- Fork over the bottom to loosen the soil and add some good quality fertiliser such as Blood Fish & Bone.
- Holding the plant upright in position with one hand, slowly backfill the hole with soil, and gently shake the plant, so the soil falls back around the roots.
- Firm in and water well.
Aftercare Advice for your raspberries:
- A thick mulch will conserve moisture and suffocate weeds. Keep a thick layer of mulch around the plants at all times.
- Water daily from spring until after harvest. Regular watering is better than infrequent deep soaking.
- Remove any suckers (canes that grow well away from the rows) to prevent them taking valuable nutrients away from the main plant.
- Cut down any raspberry canes that have already fruited in November, leaving long canes for the following year’s bigger crops.
- Summer-fruiting varieties crop in July on last year’s growth



















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