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Raspberries

Raspberries produce many small, sweet fruits every summer—for over a month! Come August, it's critical to prune your berry shrubs to keep the berries coming! See our tips on growing, harvesting, and pruning raspberries.

Raspberries are a shrub belonging to the Rosaceae family, in the genus Rubus. One of the most popular berries in North America, one raspberry bush can produce several hundred berries per season!

Not only are raspberries perfect for picking and eating straight off the stem, but they're also wondering in jams, pies and tarts, or smoothies and drinks. Plus, fresh raspberries are an excellent source of vitamin-C to support the immune system and helps fight infections.

There are two types of raspberries, both with their own specific requirements for growing: 

  1. Summer-fruiting raspberries are more common, developing their fruit on last year's growth. They bear one crop per season, in summertime (often June or July).
  2. Ever-bearing raspberries (also called fall-bearing or autumn-bearing) produce berries on new canes. they bear a fall crop and can also produce fruit the following summer.

A mix of both types of berries would be an ideal way to maximize the harvest period.

All raspberries are self-fertile, so you only need one bush to produce fruit. They're best pollinated by bees, and will start producing fruit a year after planting.

Though raspberry bushes are naturally inclined to grow in cooler climates, the plants now come in many varieties suited to a range of planting zones.

The Importance of Pruning

All raspberries will need pruning annually! Raspberries are perennials, however it's important to realize that their branches (or canes) which bear the fruit live for only two summers. During the first year, the new green cane (primocane) grows vegetatively. The cane develops a brown bark, is dormant in winter, and during the second growing season is called a floricane. The floricane produces fruit in early to mid summer and then dies. New primocanes are produced each year, so fruit production continues year after year. It's your job to prune out those dead canes each year.

See more pruning advice below.

Planting

When to Plant Raspberries

Choosing and Preparing a Planting Site

How to Plant Raspberries

Raspberries

Want to see how to plant? Watch our video demo on how to plant, harvest, and prune raspberries!

Check out this video to learn how to plant raspberries. 

Care

How to Care for Raspberries

How to Prune Raspberries

Prune summer-fruiting raspberries immediately after you're done picking! Cut only the canes that produced berries back down to the ground.

(Remember this plant produces berries on two year old canes while one year old canes grow right beside them. You shouldn’t have trouble telling which is which: the older canes have brown stems, and the young ones are still green. Prune only the older ones, the ones that have finished their fruitful year.)

Tie the remaining canes to the supporting wires with garden string. There should not be any more than one cane every four inches of wire, so cut down additional canes.

Ever-bearing or fall-bearing raspberries 

Note: The above assumes you are harvesting a fall crop. To get both fall and following summer crop, do not remove the primocanes that produced the fall crop. Prune them back in spring to about 12 inches above the support, or to the last visible node that had fruit, cutting off the dead tips.

Raspberries

Pests/Diseases

Raspberries are one of the few fruits that are hardly bothered by pests and diseases. (Black raspberries are more susceptible to this type of damage than red or purple.)

Recommended Varieties

There are many, many raspberry varieties available today—and each one is unique! Here are a few to get you started. Ask your local garden center or cooperative extension service which raspberry varieties are best-suited for your area.

Tired of raspberries? Try your hand at growing blackberries, blueberries, or strawberries instead!

Harvest/Storage

How to Harvest Raspberries

Raspberries

How to Store Raspberries

Wit and Wisdom Recipes Raspberry Honey Cake With Raspberry Sauce Raspberry-Rhubarb Pie Peach Raspberry Crunch Cooking Notes

Fresh raspberries are wonderful in cereals or paired with a dollop of Greek-style yogurt. Use in smoothies, too!

If the fruit is to be made into preserves, it should be done with fruit that's as fresh as possible.


Modern Agriculture
Planting