Soft fruit for two
In article , anton
writes
AG: Sunberry may be what we know as worcesterberry.
No- sunberry is given as raspberry x blackberry in Hessayon's
'the Fruit Expert'. Worcesterberry is in the currant family.
It grows as a small very
dark gooseberry - we are just beginning to pick our two bushes of it
this week. They are interesting enough as a novelty, but we prefer to
rely on straight gooseberries - and later on blackberries for reliable
annual supplies.
According to Joanna Readman in her 'Fruity Stories'; a jostaberry is a
cross between a blackcurrant and a gooseberry; and a worcesterberry is a
small, purple, very thorny gooseberry - I believe it to be a blackberry
cross with gooseberry.
I think you mean blackcurrant, in any case.
I've checked Joanna Readman's text - and my quotation of her is as she
wrote it. In some books, worcesterberry is described as a wild fruit.
I can confirm that ours are very hardy and disease resistant, though the
fruit is nothing very special.
Chambers English Dictionary defines worcesterberry thus: " A N.American
species of gooseberry (Ribes divaricatum), not a hybrid" R. div. is
given in Zander as E.Coastal(USA) Black Gooseberry, Common gooseberry.
have fun,
Thanks, we always do when we are gardening :-))
--
Alan & Joan Gould - North Lincs.
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