Hello mate. Just started growin blueberrys myself. Il be growing them in large pots. Just bought some acidic compost for when I re pot them. My water has a PH of like 7.7. Do I need to PH water down 5 or does the acidic soil regulate it itself?Wow! You have berries already? That's too bad about the frost getting your other berries. Mine are just dropping flowers but they are loaded. I really amended the soil to lower the Ph and they really seem to like it now. I added some sulfur and other stuff.
All beautiful. So strawberries are related to mj? This article ( http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/flower/about.html ) mentions it's genetic relationSome great looking plants / fruits in here. My berries are starting to come through now,
Strawberries
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I didn't want to like that. Too damn true.And the same bugs seem to love them all
Are Mountain ash Berries edible? Or just bird berries?I grow winterberry, blueberry, blackberry and elderberry. I just recently become very interested in a mountain ash cultivar called Ivan Beauty which is a Mountain Ash crossed with Chokeberry. I also just started growing a cross between Mountain ash and pear called Shipova that I am very excited to get results on (resembles the pear more than the berry).
http://uncommonfruit.cias.wisc.edu/shipova-bollwiller-pear/
Black Aronia (chokeberry), Orange mountain ash, Ivans beauty
Some great information on growing blueberries here.
Before Sure Gel, you had to get your pectin naturally.Very edible if you can get them before the birds. Mostly tart but high in pectin so its used in jellies. Not used as widely anymore. Also called Rowan. Once was sacred to the Druids and may have been the source of the word "Rune". The Korean varieties are more ornamental but certain cultivars from UK were once widely eaten.
Ivans belle is a cross between hawthorn and Mountain ash and most used for edible fruit. I believe the UK varieties will have a more red color and the Korean varieties more orange.
https://www.druidry.org/library/trees/tree-lore-rowan
Cool. I didn't know that.. my mom has one in her yard and for whatever reason as a kid growing up there, I always thought they were poisonous. I may have to try one and see what it tastes like..Very edible if you can get them before the birds. Mostly tart but high in pectin so its used in jellies. Not used as widely anymore. Also called Rowan. Once was sacred to the Druids and comes from the word "rune". The Korean varieties are more ornamental but certain cultivars from UK were once widely eaten.
https://www.druidry.org/library/trees/tree-lore-rowan
Ivans belle is a cross between hawthorn and Mountain ash and most used for edible fruit. Not sure what they graft to, but I believe it can go with either species to change its mature time. I believe the UK varieties will have a more red color and are better suited to eating than the Korean varieties that are more orange and ornamental. Many hybrids now I believe for ornamental and most may only be for the birds.
https://onegreenworld.com/product/ivans-belle-2/
I have an Oregon crab apple (Malus fusca) that I have made jam from and doesn't require pectin because it has natural pectin. The jam was delicious. I'm thinking of using it with other fruit and skipping the Sure Gel. I'll do a test batch but I think it will work.Before Sure Gel, you had to get your pectin naturally.