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Nitromax® 28-09-2009 12:16 PM

Gooseberry bushes
 
I have two gooseberry bushes that put on a decent growth
spurt this year. However, the caterpillars approved of the
new growth and during the course of just three days ate
pretty much all of it.

I picked off as many as I could but there were hundreds of
the buggers most of them rather small. A blast with the
hose pipe was the most effective method and finally got
rid of them.

Now I have two rather bare bushes, the only leaves left are
those from last years growth. Assuming I can keep the
caterpillars at bay next year, what are the chances of
the bushes recovering?

Would I be better off doing some hard pruning, leave it alone
or will the new growth come back?

T.I.A

--
Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you
realise you're wrong.


[email protected] 28-09-2009 12:47 PM

Gooseberry bushes
 
On 28 Sep, 13:16, Nitromax® wrote:
I have two gooseberry bushes that put on a decent growth
spurt this year. However, the caterpillars approved of the
new growth and during the course of just three days ate
pretty much all of it.

I picked off as many as I could but there were hundreds of
the buggers most of them rather small. A blast with the
hose pipe was the most effective method and finally got
rid of them.

Now I have two rather bare bushes, the only leaves left are
those from last years growth. Assuming I can keep the
caterpillars at bay next year, what are the chances of
the bushes recovering?

Would I be better off doing some hard pruning, leave it alone
or will the new growth come back?

T.I.A

--
Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you
realise you're wrong.


They'll regrow their leaves next year. No need to do anything now. But
next year, keep an eye out for the caterpillars, and spray with a
suitable killer as soon as they appear, targeting the underside of the
leaves where they hide. If you don't like using chemicals, soapy water
(ex washing-up) may also work.

If I can tag on a question of my own: My books say that gooseberries
don't need pruning, but in recent years I've had a dramatic downturn
in quantity of fruit, with or without caterpillars, and the bushes are
straggling a bit. Does the panel thing that pruning would improve
yield, or at least not reduce it any more?

Chris

Stewart Robert Hinsley 28-09-2009 01:10 PM

Gooseberry bushes
 
In message
,
writes
On 28 Sep, 13:16, Nitromax® wrote:
I have two gooseberry bushes that put on a decent growth
spurt this year. However, the caterpillars approved of the
new growth and during the course of just three days ate
pretty much all of it.

I picked off as many as I could but there were hundreds of
the buggers most of them rather small. A blast with the
hose pipe was the most effective method and finally got
rid of them.

Now I have two rather bare bushes, the only leaves left are
those from last years growth. Assuming I can keep the
caterpillars at bay next year, what are the chances of
the bushes recovering?

Would I be better off doing some hard pruning, leave it alone
or will the new growth come back?

T.I.A

--
Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you
realise you're wrong.


They'll regrow their leaves next year. No need to do anything now. But
next year, keep an eye out for the caterpillars, and spray with a
suitable killer as soon as they appear, targeting the underside of the
leaves where they hide. If you don't like using chemicals, soapy water
(ex washing-up) may also work.

If I can tag on a question of my own: My books say that gooseberries
don't need pruning, but in recent years I've had a dramatic downturn
in quantity of fruit, with or without caterpillars, and the bushes are
straggling a bit. Does the panel thing that pruning would improve
yield, or at least not reduce it any more?

Chris


I inherited some gooseberries bushes with an allotment. One is on the
corner of the allotment, so I have to prune it anyway, to stop if
blocking access to allotments further down the plot. This doesn't seem
to have done any harm.

Apart from that, my impression was the pruning was beneficial. I cut out
some of the old wood, and healthy new growth takes over. Also if allowed
to, gooseberries produce tangled masses of stems, which are not exactly
easy to harvest the berries from.

The one bush produces plenty of fruit for me - I've still got several
litres in the freezer - so I haven't paid much attention to the other
bushes at the back of the allotment, which are the aforesaid tangled
masses of stems, and aren't very productive. But the low productivity
could also be due to overshading by hawthorns on the boundary - I've
noticed that gooseberries growing wild produce hardly any fruits.
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley

Nitromax® 28-09-2009 01:39 PM

Gooseberry bushes
 

wrote in message
...


They'll regrow their leaves next year. No need to do anything now. But
next year, keep an eye out for the caterpillars, and spray with a
suitable killer as soon as they appear, targeting the underside of the
leaves where they hide. If you don't like using chemicals, soapy water
(ex washing-up) may also work.

If I can tag on a question of my own: My books say that gooseberries
don't need pruning, but in recent years I've had a dramatic downturn
in quantity of fruit, with or without caterpillars, and the bushes are
straggling a bit. Does the panel thing that pruning would improve
yield, or at least not reduce it any more?

Chris


Thanks, I will leave it to nature and see what happens.

--
Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you
realise you're wrong.



Bob Hobden 28-09-2009 03:17 PM

Gooseberry bushes
 

chrisj.doran wrote ...
Nitromax® wrote:
I have two gooseberry bushes that put on a decent growth
spurt this year. However, the caterpillars approved of the
new growth and during the course of just three days ate
pretty much all of it.

I picked off as many as I could but there were hundreds of
the buggers most of them rather small. A blast with the
hose pipe was the most effective method and finally got
rid of them.

Now I have two rather bare bushes, the only leaves left are
those from last years growth. Assuming I can keep the
caterpillars at bay next year, what are the chances of
the bushes recovering?

Would I be better off doing some hard pruning, leave it alone
or will the new growth come back?


They'll regrow their leaves next year. No need to do anything now. But
next year, keep an eye out for the caterpillars, and spray with a
suitable killer as soon as they appear, targeting the underside of the
leaves where they hide. If you don't like using chemicals, soapy water
(ex washing-up) may also work.

If I can tag on a question of my own: My books say that gooseberries
don't need pruning, but in recent years I've had a dramatic downturn
in quantity of fruit, with or without caterpillars, and the bushes are
straggling a bit. Does the panel thing that pruning would improve
yield, or at least not reduce it any more?

Always prune ours, if only to keep them in shape and make it easier to pick
the fruit. Usual stuff, removing damaged, crossed branches and old wood. I
also stop them making horizontal branches near the ground so any fruit is
kept off the soil.

--
Regards
Bob Hobden
just W. of London





K 28-09-2009 05:20 PM

Gooseberry bushes
 
Nitromax® writes
I have two gooseberry bushes that put on a decent growth
spurt this year. However, the caterpillars approved of the
new growth and during the course of just three days ate
pretty much all of it.

Not caterpillars. Probably sawfly larvae. They look superficially like
caterpillars but they don't grow up into butterflies or moths ;-)

I picked off as many as I could but there were hundreds of
the buggers most of them rather small. A blast with the
hose pipe was the most effective method and finally got
rid of them.

Now I have two rather bare bushes, the only leaves left are
those from last years growth. Assuming I can keep the
caterpillars at bay next year, what are the chances of
the bushes recovering?


It won't cause them the slightest problem. Don't worry about it.


--
Kay

K 28-09-2009 05:22 PM

Gooseberry bushes
 
If I can tag on a question of my own: My books say that gooseberries
don't need pruning, but in recent years I've had a dramatic downturn
in quantity of fruit, with or without caterpillars, and the bushes are
straggling a bit. Does the panel thing that pruning would improve
yield, or at least not reduce it any more?

From what I've read, they fruit better on younger wood, so you could try
cutting out some of the old gnarly branches.
--
Kay

shazzbat 28-09-2009 07:35 PM

Gooseberry bushes
 

"K" wrote in message
...
If I can tag on a question of my own: My books say that gooseberries
don't need pruning, but in recent years I've had a dramatic downturn
in quantity of fruit, with or without caterpillars, and the bushes are
straggling a bit. Does the panel thing that pruning would improve
yield, or at least not reduce it any more?

From what I've read, they fruit better on younger wood, so you could try
cutting out some of the old gnarly branches.
--
Kay


Harvest and prune in one fell swoop. Cut off the branches with fruit and
take them to the table to pick the fruit off. Both jobs done. This works
with blackcurrants etc too.

Steve


Jim Jackson 05-10-2009 10:33 PM

Gooseberry bushes
 
shazzbat wrote:

If I can tag on a question of my own: My books say that gooseberries
don't need pruning, but in recent years I've had a dramatic downturn
in quantity of fruit, with or without caterpillars, and the bushes are
straggling a bit. Does the panel thing that pruning would improve
yield, or at least not reduce it any more?

From what I've read, they fruit better on younger wood, so you could try
cutting out some of the old gnarly branches.


Harvest and prune in one fell swoop. Cut off the branches with fruit and
take them to the table to pick the fruit off. Both jobs done. This works
with blackcurrants etc too.


I'd not recommend this for gooseberries as a wholesale procedure. Sure do
a few branches to thin, but gooseberry fruits well for several years on
the same wood. I mostly prune out new growth, leaving maybe one new branch
per year, and remove some of the oldest wood. If your goosberry is
vigorous, you'll need to prune out or reduce side shoots etc to encourage
good air circulation (to keep down mildew and other diseases).

I've a 22 year gooseberry that gives me more than 25lbs fruit every year -
they really can be extraordinarily productive.


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