Support Your Red & Golden Raspberries
In our video on planting and growing raspberries and blackberries, Tricia shows how she grows her blackberries and black raspberries in the "hill method", with the canes growing in clumps next to a fence or post for support. Boysenberrries are related to blackberries and should be grown the same way. If you live in an area where the soil dries quickly, berries can be planted on flat soil (no hilling).
Red and golden raspberries don't just look different from black raspberries -- they need more support and their canes should be tied to structures. There are many support options for you.

Pruning Everbearer or Fall Bearer Raspberries
Typical raspberries have perennial roots and biennial canes. The roots send up canes that do not produce anything but leaves in the first year (primocanes). In the second year they bloom and fruit (floricanes), then die, and are cut to the ground after the summer harvest. With the everbearer or fall bearer raspberries, the first year canes produce fruit at the tips in late summer or fall, and from side (or lateral) branches in their second summer. For the maximum crop, mow or cut down all the everbearer canes after the fall harvest.Mowing or Cutting Down Raspberry Canes
For a typical home berry patch, cut those canes off near the ground with loppers. TIP: Make it easy to mow the canes. Don't drive your T-bars into the ground, and then mow around them. Instead, sink PVC pipes in the ground, and drop the T-bars inside the pipes. When it's time to mow, pull the T-bars out of the way, mow, and then replace the T-bars. HALF AS MUCH: Another alternative is to mow half the bed each year. That way you will have berries in summer at the tips of new canes AND berries on the older, lower branches. And you only have to mow half as much. For more bramble information try the short and sweet book on Berries, Raspberries & Blackberries from Storey. In the Country Wisdom Bulletin series, it is 32 pages and has a lot of good information. UC Davis IPM has a thorough guide to growing raspberries and blackberries.Blackberry Pruning
Blackberries are pruned differently than raspberries. During the dormant season, prune out the canes that fruited the previous year down to the ground. Also thin out any thin weak canes. You want no more than about 6 to 8 really strong canes. Once you have thinned, head back the remaining canes to about 4-5 feet from the ground. Then trim the remaining lateral branches to about 12 to 18".
Make raspberries and blackberries an inexpensive part of your summer diet when you grow your own!
15 comments
This is the first summer for my blackberries. No fruit, but I expected none. Do I do any pruning this fall or just let the branches alone until after they fruit? Thank you.
Gary, you can prune the floricanes (ones with fruit) after the fruit has been harvested. You can either prune them to the ground now or wait until winter. The primocanes will shoot up really tall (on blackberries at least) and you want to trim those to the height of your support. Those canes will produce the fruit the following year. Do not prune them to the ground.
Do I trim off the very end of the branches that flower and product fruit, after we have picked the fruit
Allison, I have always read that you should not plant raspberries anywhere near wild blackberries. But you should be ok with other types of blackberries. Just keep your beds cleaned up (leaves and dropped fruit).
Is it okay to grow blackberries and raspberries together?