Tayberries
- Andy Hamilton
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Tayberries
Just got a tayberry plant from aldi for £1 not sure if I should stick it on the allotment or in a pot in the garden? It is a raseberry/blackberry hybrid raseberries don't fair too well in pots but black berries can (I believe).
First we sow the seeds, nature grows the seeds then we eat the seeds. Neil Pye
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A whole quid!! Wow, that's a bargain.
A scottish hybrid if I'm not mistaken. No idea AT ALL whether it will grow in a pot... soz mate... Have never grown rasps or blackberries in a pot. Will ask around.
A scottish hybrid if I'm not mistaken. No idea AT ALL whether it will grow in a pot... soz mate... Have never grown rasps or blackberries in a pot. Will ask around.
Shirley
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Sounds like you did well, mate. I've never heard of a Tayberry!
Nev
Nev
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- Andy Hamilton
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cheers the ground it is then. I need to have a proper look up at aldi to see if they have any rasberrys too.
First we sow the seeds, nature grows the seeds then we eat the seeds. Neil Pye
My best selling Homebrew book Booze for Free
and...... Twitter
The Other Andy Hamilton - Drinks & Foraging
My best selling Homebrew book Booze for Free
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- Chickenlady
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Tayberries sound a bit like boysenberries I reckon. I had them years ago in New Zealand and they were lovely, but I have never seen them in the UK. I think they were a raspberry and blackberry hybrid with something else too - loganberry maybe.
We don't have an Aldi, but I discovered that Wilkinsons is very good value. Got the seed potatoes in there the other day.
We don't have an Aldi, but I discovered that Wilkinsons is very good value. Got the seed potatoes in there the other day.
Haste makes waste
- Andy Hamilton
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Ah a Tayberry grower can I pick your brains then? Is it going to be ok to plant it out now? I am guessing I will have to put a bit of manure around it? - Never grown any fruit (apart from tomatoes) before so any advice would be fantastic.
First we sow the seeds, nature grows the seeds then we eat the seeds. Neil Pye
My best selling Homebrew book Booze for Free
and...... Twitter
The Other Andy Hamilton - Drinks & Foraging
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I just bought 2 tayberry plants from woollies for 2.48 the 2. They are planted out and look okay(it says April on the box so I think they'll be alright).
I had to dig a new fruit bed as I also got 8 rasps. My fruit beds are now chockablock so if I buy anymore I'll have to start yet another bed.
The birds are going to love us this year.
I had to dig a new fruit bed as I also got 8 rasps. My fruit beds are now chockablock so if I buy anymore I'll have to start yet another bed.
The birds are going to love us this year.
- Andy Hamilton
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Time for an update on the tayberry bushes then. Well one of them seems to be sprouting new shoots, the other is doing nothing. They went in at the same time as some red currants and another three raspberry bushes, signs of life on all of them apart from one of the tayberry bushes.
I didn't get hold of any manure so they in with compost. The dormant one got the pick of the crop though. I am wondering as it is the most exposed out of all of them if the last big cold snap that we had killed it off.
I didn't get hold of any manure so they in with compost. The dormant one got the pick of the crop though. I am wondering as it is the most exposed out of all of them if the last big cold snap that we had killed it off.
First we sow the seeds, nature grows the seeds then we eat the seeds. Neil Pye
My best selling Homebrew book Booze for Free
and...... Twitter
The Other Andy Hamilton - Drinks & Foraging
My best selling Homebrew book Booze for Free
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The Other Andy Hamilton - Drinks & Foraging
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Mine had a few leaves when I put them in and still have them after the last few frosts. I expect they will be okay as they are part blackberry which is nearly indestructible.I've put compost around mine too as I didn't have any manure. An old book I have, mentions youngberries which are a blackberry/raspberry cross.I wonder if that is another name for them.
I got my redcurrants from some which had spread from next door. They are getting some good leaves on despite looking like bits of stick just shoved in the ground last autumn.
I got my redcurrants from some which had spread from next door. They are getting some good leaves on despite looking like bits of stick just shoved in the ground last autumn.
- Stonehead
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Tayberries are delicious eaten off the bush, but only if eaten when very, very ripe (and therefore very, very mushy). In fact, I'd rate them higher than rapsberries or blackberries - we grow all three (including both wild and cultivated raspberries) plus blueberries, gooseberries and blackcurrants.
In general though, I'd recommend picking tayberries while they're still a little firm and using them in preserves as Ina suggests.
For useful info on organic bramble growing, have a look at
http://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/bramble.html
In general though, you need soil with a pH of 6.0-6.5, low in phosphates (so no chicken manure unless you really know what you're doing) and no potassium chloride as brambles hate chlorine salts. What they do like is nitrogen so well-rotted manure and compost are a must.
You can use fresh manure, but then you have all the problems of nitrogen burn and restrictions on when you can harvest so we don't use it. Oh, and apply your organic fertilisers mid to late winter, so it's ready for spring.
Other than that, make sure you net your brambles or the blackbirds will have a field day.
If you have any other questions, please ask.
(And no, I'm not an expert but I've made more than enough mistakes to know what not to do next time!
)
Stonehead
In general though, I'd recommend picking tayberries while they're still a little firm and using them in preserves as Ina suggests.
For useful info on organic bramble growing, have a look at
http://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/bramble.html
In general though, you need soil with a pH of 6.0-6.5, low in phosphates (so no chicken manure unless you really know what you're doing) and no potassium chloride as brambles hate chlorine salts. What they do like is nitrogen so well-rotted manure and compost are a must.
You can use fresh manure, but then you have all the problems of nitrogen burn and restrictions on when you can harvest so we don't use it. Oh, and apply your organic fertilisers mid to late winter, so it's ready for spring.
Other than that, make sure you net your brambles or the blackbirds will have a field day.
If you have any other questions, please ask.
(And no, I'm not an expert but I've made more than enough mistakes to know what not to do next time!

Stonehead