I grow thornless garden blsckberries. I love them too. Just not the massive garden thug Himalayan blackberries.
Are the Himalayan Blackberries the ones that grow all along the roads and ditches etc around the coast and Vancouver area?
My biggest nightmare at the moment when the weather picks up will be Oxalis it's growing all through the gravel boarder and the seeds have spread to the front garden gravel Hubby loves the look. Here's the culprit below and i'm not burning it like last time, as i set my plants on fire
Yes. They have stems thicker than my chubby thumbs, covered with blood-drawing thorns. The brambkes grow up to twenty feet tall, and tip-root to make new plants. Himalayan blackberries have large berries, which when almost over-ripe have nice flavor but a slight bitter edge. The garden blackberries don't seem to have that bitterness. Himalayan Blackberries have an interesting story. Luther Burbank grew them from a seed packet he received from India, hence the name. They actually originate in Armenia. He wanted to create a berry crop for the West Coast, and sold them. Birds ate the berries and spread the seeds, giving us masses of fast growing brambles. When I clear blackberry brambles, I have to watch for stinging nettles too. Double trouble, LOL.
We have a dead red berry tree in between our conifers and omg the mess on the back garden was terrible and you can imagine the slabs when the pigeons eat them purple dye but for some reason 3yrs ago it slowly died off.
I forgot to mention my weeds, Mel. My excuses. Mares Tail, bindweed and ground elder are the worst. I do have to keep a close eye on the reed too that sometimes tries to creep in from across the canal. Like Gail, I have that Oxalis menace, but it is under control now.
That is a very pretty weed Gail. Funny how they swing that sometimes. Perhaps they are appealing to our eye as part of their survival - a genetic trait to be pretty to humans.
That is very interesting Daniel, thanks. I didn't know that. I ate my first blackberry about ten years ago in Oregon, at my daughter's White Coat Ceremony. They had a huge pyramid of fruit. They were huge and sweet...I really enjoyed them. I've tried buying a tiny container of them a couple of times since at the grocery....ugh. I wish I could grow them, but I'm happy to know to not ever try with a Coast Himalayan transplant. ( Hubby has suggested over the years we try to dig one up and try to get it to grow here.).
It is pretty i will admitt but it's spreading by my plants and i'm a bit worried it will take the nutrients from my other plants. When i had my lavender plants in, i tried to burn it and set my lavender on fire I know where it's spread from my neighbours as it started just by the fencing from her garden, never had it in all the years we've lived here.
I know Logan i shaped them round as you know and that big cushion ball on the front, that was removed last year it got that large and splitting apart.
Mid January, we have chickweed in bloom. It is rampant now, but dies out in early spring. Heaven knows what weed will crop up next--we have as many weeds as we have bugs here in Texas. Always something interesting . . . .