The berry walk has lots of small fruits growing along it. There are loganberries (at end on support by greenhouse), raspberries (3 varieties), black currants, red currants, and gooseberries, all under-planted with 'Totem' June-bearing strawberries. They grow and produce well together.
This is a good time to weed and feed, prune out old wood and provide tie on support for trailing vines. Dig out raspberry canes that have strayed beyond support wires, and remove any competing weeds such as buttercup and couch grass.
After weeding, I feed the soil with uncontaminated wood ash from the wood stove, and add a seaweed-enriched compost mix. (Granular seaweed works well as a fertilizer for cane fruits).
TIP: Raspberries love the extra nitrogen boost from being mulched with fresh grass clippings.

Rhubarb
It's very exciting to see rhubarb poke it's head up in early spring. I obviously like rhubarb because I have 5 varieties of it growing!
TIP: There's one thing you need to remember about rhubarb. It's a greedy feeder and likes lots of manure and compost. I feed it in fall and again in early spring, which means I get rewarded with lots of juicy red rhubarb stalks.
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Comments
For wonderful rhubarb, mulch it with grass clippings. I also tear the leaves off when I am picking rhubarb and tuck the leaves back under the remaining stalks. My rhubarb gives me strong stalks for much longer since I learned this trick.
May 12, 2008 at 08:42Anonymous comments are welcome, but they must first go to an approval queue. Register here to join our online community, and then login to start posting immediately.