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Andrew 31-07-2004 05:43 AM

rasberries question
 
the rasberries normally that grow in my garden have always been, for
lack of a better phrase, perfect.. They have been soft to the touch when
picked and tasted as a rasberry should taste. For some reason for the
last week or so they have started to become crumbly. When I try to pick
them, some of the rasberries basically crumble into crumbs. I realize
crumbs is probably not the best term, but I hope that you understand
what I am trying to say. They even feel a little on the dry side (the
ones that crumble apart). Not all of them are that way, and the ground
is plenty wet. Any ideas of what might cause this. Or if this is a bad
group or if there is a better group to ask this, please point me in the
correct direction.
Andrew


Pat Kiewicz 31-07-2004 11:56 AM

rasberries question
 
Andrew said:

the rasberries normally that grow in my garden have always been, for
lack of a better phrase, perfect.. They have been soft to the touch when
picked and tasted as a rasberry should taste. For some reason for the
last week or so they have started to become crumbly. snip


Virus infections can cause crumbly fruit, but I've always noticed that
toward the end of the summer crop there is a tendency for the berries
to be small and break apart. I've put it down to poor pollination. As
the fresh flowers dwindle, the bees are less interested. If all the berries
on a particular plant are affected right from the beginning of the season,
you might be justified in worrying about virus infection.

Info on raspberry viruses:
http://ohioline.osu.edu/b861/b861_28.html
--
Pat in Plymouth MI ('someplace.net' is comcast)

Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
(attributed to Don Marti)


Pat Kiewicz 31-07-2004 11:56 AM

rasberries question
 
Andrew said:

the rasberries normally that grow in my garden have always been, for
lack of a better phrase, perfect.. They have been soft to the touch when
picked and tasted as a rasberry should taste. For some reason for the
last week or so they have started to become crumbly. snip


Virus infections can cause crumbly fruit, but I've always noticed that
toward the end of the summer crop there is a tendency for the berries
to be small and break apart. I've put it down to poor pollination. As
the fresh flowers dwindle, the bees are less interested. If all the berries
on a particular plant are affected right from the beginning of the season,
you might be justified in worrying about virus infection.

Info on raspberry viruses:
http://ohioline.osu.edu/b861/b861_28.html
--
Pat in Plymouth MI ('someplace.net' is comcast)

Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
(attributed to Don Marti)


Pat Kiewicz 31-07-2004 11:56 AM

rasberries question
 
Andrew said:

the rasberries normally that grow in my garden have always been, for
lack of a better phrase, perfect.. They have been soft to the touch when
picked and tasted as a rasberry should taste. For some reason for the
last week or so they have started to become crumbly. snip


Virus infections can cause crumbly fruit, but I've always noticed that
toward the end of the summer crop there is a tendency for the berries
to be small and break apart. I've put it down to poor pollination. As
the fresh flowers dwindle, the bees are less interested. If all the berries
on a particular plant are affected right from the beginning of the season,
you might be justified in worrying about virus infection.

Info on raspberry viruses:
http://ohioline.osu.edu/b861/b861_28.html
--
Pat in Plymouth MI ('someplace.net' is comcast)

Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
(attributed to Don Marti)



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