Berries Ideas, Tips & Guides

How to Grow Honeyberries - gardenersworld.com - Britain - Japan
gardenersworld.com
31.07.2023

How to Grow Honeyberries

Honeyberries are deciduous shrubs in the honeysuckle or Caprifoliaceae family. Also known as the blue honeysuckle or edible honeysuckle, their native range includes Siberia and Japan. These hardy, low maintenance bushes have become popular in the UK recently. Unlike blueberries, they thrive in both acid and alkaline soils, and they make a fantastic addition to a fruit garden or a warm, sunny border.

How to Grow Honeyberries - gardenersworld.com - Britain - Japan
gardenersworld.com
28.07.2023

How to Grow Honeyberries

Honeyberries are deciduous shrubs in the honeysuckle or Caprifoliaceae family. Also known as the blue honeysuckle or edible honeysuckle, their native range includes Siberia and Japan. These hardy, low maintenance bushes have become popular in the UK recently. Unlike blueberries, they thrive in both acid and alkaline soils, and they make a fantastic addition to a fruit garden or a warm, sunny border.

31 Best Colorful Hedge Plants | Hedges with Colored Leaves - balconygardenweb.com
balconygardenweb.com
27.07.2023

31 Best Colorful Hedge Plants | Hedges with Colored Leaves

Introducing the Best Colorful Hedge Plants, a vibrant selection of foliage that will add a burst of colors to your landscape. These eye-catching hedges combine beauty and functionality, making them a perfect choice for any garden or outdoor space.

17 Striking Plants that Look Like Aliens - balconygardenweb.com
balconygardenweb.com
26.07.2023

17 Striking Plants that Look Like Aliens

Here are Plants that Look Like Aliens! Check out the peculiar appearances of these extraordinary plants, resembling aliens from distant galaxies, in this amazing article on alien like plants.

15 Best Blue Fruits | Delicious Blue Fruits that are Blue - balconygardenweb.com - Usa - state California
balconygardenweb.com
26.07.2023

15 Best Blue Fruits | Delicious Blue Fruits that are Blue

Have a look at the Best Blue Fruits that you can grow along with different plants and flowers in your garden for a touch of royal tint!

Simple tips for maintaining strawberry plants - theprovince.com
theprovince.com
25.07.2023

Simple tips for maintaining strawberry plants

Reviews and recommendations are unbiased and products are independently selected. Postmedia may earn an affiliate commission from purchases made through links on this page.

Why Cara Cara Oranges Are the Colorful Citrus You’ll Want to Try ASAP - bhg.com - Brazil - Washington - state California
bhg.com
25.07.2023

Why Cara Cara Oranges Are the Colorful Citrus You’ll Want to Try ASAP

Did you know that citrus fruits are one of the only fruits in season during the winter? Not too long ago, the joys of taste-testing some unique citrus fruits was limited to winter, but now we can enjoy many citrus fruits (and their many benefits) all year long. One delicious type of orange that you may not be familiar with is the cara cara orange. A relatively new kid on the block, the cara cara is not only beautiful, but it also has a flavor profile that might just make it your new favorite citrus.

Garden Gazing Balls - hometalk.com
hometalk.com
25.07.2023

Garden Gazing Balls

This post was transcribed by a member of the Hometalk editorial team from the original HometalkTV episode.

Growing Nandina Domestica in Pots | Heavenly Bamboo Care - balconygardenweb.com
balconygardenweb.com
25.07.2023

Growing Nandina Domestica in Pots | Heavenly Bamboo Care

Growing Nandina Domestica in Pots? Here’s all you need to know! These beautiful plants are perfect for container gardening, offering a range of varieties that are both easy to care for and stunning to behold.

Weed of The Month – Virginia Creeper - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa - state Virginia
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Weed of The Month – Virginia Creeper

Virginia creeper is a native North American, deciduous vine, which can easily climb 30 feet or higher. Its tendrils end in oval shaped disks that adhere to surfaces and can damage stucco, the mortar between bricks, and painted surfaces. This highly adaptable plant grows in full sun to full shade. Grown as a groundcover, it can provide erosion control on slopes. Virginia creeper is very drought tolerant and a vigorous grower. To control the spread of this somewhat aggressive vine, prune, mow, or weed whack in the spring.

Late Season Blueberry Plants Management - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Late Season Blueberry Plants Management

After the blueberry harvest is over in the home berry patch, we often neglect late season care for our plants. Consistent care over the entire growing season will improve the chances of a good crop this season as well as next year. Proper fertility, freedom from weed competition, and consistent moisture during the growing season will maintain good growth and vigor of blueberry plants.

Infusing Water with Fruits, Herbs and Spices - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Infusing Water with Fruits, Herbs and Spices

Most people can benefit from drinking more water. Here’s how to make it more exciting!

Mistletoe - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Mistletoe

Mistletoe is often found hanging in American homes as a traditional decoration during the holiday season. Once believed to have magical powers, as well as medicinal properties, the custom in which kissing under the mistletoe would inevitably lead to marriage developed in England. Thankfully, our modern American interpretation of this tradition between partners, families, and friends is much more innocent. Most mistletoes are evergreen, making them easy to locate and harvest after leaves of their deciduous hosts drop in late fall and winter. Their visibility during this time is likely why the plants often are used as festive decorations at Christmas time.

Berry Topped Cheesecake Bites - hgic.clemson.edu - Greece
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Berry Topped Cheesecake Bites

Fresh berries taste great straight off the bush; however, sometimes we just need variety. The following recipe for cheesecake bites makes an exciting base for berries of all sorts. They are no-bake, quick, and super tasty!

December Week 2 Garden Photos - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

December Week 2 Garden Photos

The Ilex (Holly) genus has about 400+ species of evergreen and deciduous plants. Hollies are a great addition to a pollinator garden for bees and other pollinating insects. Birds love the berries.

Holiday Table Centerpiece - hgic.clemson.edu - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Holiday Table Centerpiece

This year, more than ever, holiday traditions are important. One of my favorite traditions is making a centerpiece for my dining room table. Usually, this is a project I share with my grandchildren when they visit. We walk around my garden and collect attractive foliage, berries, and dried flowers.

Creative Ideas for Holiday Decorating - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Creative Ideas for Holiday Decorating

Using freshly cut foliage for holiday decorations has been a family tradition for generations. Instead of using artificial greenery, brighten the holiday season by walking around your garden and gathering interesting leaves and berries to create distinctive and unique arrangements. Involve young folks in the process to create lasting holiday memories.

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report January 11, 2021 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report January 11, 2021

Rob Last reports, “Vegetable crops are growing out of the impacts of frost well. There is active Alternaria in places on brassica crops. Insect activity in vegetable crops in the area remains low. Strawberry crops are moving well, with a few spider mites and aphids being observed. Remember, if mite treatment is needed, use a specific miticide to target the pest to avoid flaring populations. If you need a second pair of eyes to help scout, then please give me a shout.”

Weed of the Month: Smilax (Greenbrier) - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Weed of the Month: Smilax (Greenbrier)

Smilax vines go by the common names greenbrier or catbrier due to the thorns covering their stems. There are 300 to 350 smilax species worldwide. Approximately twenty-four species are native to North America, with fifteen species growing in South Carolina. Smilax grows well in moist shade and is an important food source and habitat for wildlife, including birds, rabbits, and deer.

Preserving Strawberries - hgic.clemson.edu - state South Carolina
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Preserving Strawberries

Strawberry season is just around the corner in South Carolina. Having a plan to preserve fresh strawberries can mean more farm-fresh flavor year-round and less food waste. Strawberries are high acid foods and can be processed safely using a Boiling Water Canner or Atmospheric Steam Canner. For detailed information on home canning, please read HGIC 3040, Canning Foods at Home.

Protecting Berries from Birds - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Protecting Berries from Birds

Blueberries are one of the easiest fruits to grow in the backyard garden. Provided the proper soil conditions and care, a blueberry planting can be very productive and long-lived. One of the biggest challenges for backyard berry growers is protecting the fruit from marauding birds.

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report – May, 3, 2021 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report – May, 3, 2021

Rob Last reports, “Botrytis (gray mold) is evident in places following rainfall. Sanitation and removal of the infected berries are critical to reducing inoculum loading. Fungicide applications will also be required to prevent spore germination and further spread of the disease. Where spider mite treatments have been applied, they have effectively reduced the populations but will still require scouting and monitoring.  The yields achieved are very good. Cucurbit crops continue to develop well with a low incidence of chill injury from the cooler temperatures observed on April 21/22. Crops are running well, with some flowering being observed. Cucumber beetles are being monitored, and a few aphids are present in places. Cucumber beetles observed are currently below the threshold of 5 beetles per plant. Squash bugs are also being found on some sites. Careful monitoring will be required because numbers can increase rapidly. Crops are free from disease; however, protectant fungicides are still a critical input. Blueberries are swelling well and beginning to blush.  Blackberries are flowering with excellent fruit set and bud formation. Spider mites have been evident in these crops, too; however, miticide applications are proving very effective.

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report. – April 12, 2021 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report. – April 12, 2021

Rob Last reports, “Crops are generally doing well in the area, with strawberries coming off with good volumes. On the whole, row covers, or icing protected 97% of the susceptible flowers leading to 1-2% losses of flowers. The damaged flowers can increase grey mold pressure in the crops so, maintaining both sanitation and fungicide applications to strawberries will be crucial. As berries ripen, sanitation also becomes essential for reducing pest pressure from sap beetles. In some crops, where row covers were utilized, we see spider mite populations increasing and a few active thrips feeding on both flowers and berries. Other fruit crops in the area, such as blackberries and blueberries, look very good with low levels of damage from the freeze event last weekend. Peaches in the area are being thinned, with scouting being maintained for scale and plum curculio. Early planted watermelons did suffer from the frost in places, leading to 10-15% plant loss and hence the need to replant in a few areas. Other crops are moving slowly away from the injuries. Luckily a lot of crops were not beginning to vine and survived the worst of the damage. These plants are stressed, so care will be needed with any applications as well as scouting for pest and disease issues. Conversely, Cantaloupes in the area were direct seeded and have survived unscathed.”

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report June 7, 2021 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report June 7, 2021

Rob Last reports, “After some welcome rain in the area over the weekend, crops are looking good. However, given the humidity and rainfall, we are likely to find disease pressure increasing. Strawberries are all over. The wet, humid conditions have spiked infections of botrytis and water-soaked berries. Blueberries, blackberries, and peaches are all coming to market with good quality and volumes, with few insect or disease pressures being seen currently. Watermelons and cantaloupes are developing well, with some early planted crops coming to harvest. In response to rainfall and increased humidity, keep an eye out for diseases such as bacterial spot in pepper and tomatoes. In addition, some cantaloupe crops are beginning to show Alternaria leaf spot. Make sure fungicide timings are good using a robust program.”

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report January 18, 2022 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report January 18, 2022

Rob Last reports, “In our area, crops are developing well with few pest or disease issues currently. Some brassicas are displaying a reddening to the older leaves associated with reduced phosphorous uptake. Phosphorous uptake can be reduced in cold temperatures but will recover when we see some warmer temperatures. There is no response to an additional application. Where strawberries are flowering or have fruit, it is advisable to remove those to minimize sources of Botrytis gray mold for later in the year.”

American Holly - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa - Britain - Germany - city London - state Missouri - state Texas - state Florida - state Massachusets - state Indiana - state Tennessee
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

American Holly

While the Christmas tree takes the front-and-center stage during this holiday season, supported by a cast of poinsettias, cyclamens, kalanchoes, Christmas cactuses, and amaryllises, hollies often find themselves relegated to wreaths, garlands, and candle adornments. Years ago, I learned from Fred Galle’s tome, “Hollies: The Genus Ilex” (Timber Press, OR 1997), that hollies were quintessential Christmas symbols extensively used for centuries in holiday wreaths and Christmas decorations. Galle wrote that in London in 1851, 250,000 bunches of English hollies (Ilex aquifolium) were sold and adorned houses, churches, street corners, and marketplaces. In some parts of England, residents retained the holly sprigs until the following year because they believed it would protect their homes from lightning strikes.

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report – February 7, 2022 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report – February 7, 2022

Zack Snipes reports, “Now is the time for Lowcountry strawberry growers to give their plants the first shot of boron. Boron helps with both flower and fruit development. Growers can spray boron or inject it via the drip system. Boron deficiency will show up in your fruit if you skip out on the application. Now is the time to get it out because plants will be pushing blooms soon, and they need the boron available to make nice, pretty flowers and fruit. A boron application takes only a few minutes and literally a few dollars but can keep you from throwing away thousands of misshapen or “bullnose” berries. NOTE: Boron is a great herbicide if overapplied, so make sure you put out the right amount by using the information from the picture below. We only need to put out a tiny amount, but that tiny amount makes a big difference.”

In Memory of Rick Berry - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

In Memory of Rick Berry

The horticultural world lost Rick Berry, a remarkable plantsman, in November. I had the honor of being Rick’s friend and sharing years of plant exchanges and stories. Looking back, my last visit in April 2021 to Rick’s nursery, Goodness Grows in Lexington, GA, was a poignant one.

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report March 28, 2022 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report March 28, 2022

Rob Last reports, “The first of this season’s strawberries are coming to market with good quality. Growers still need to be very mindful of spider mites. Populations are around in the area but are variable. As we get into harvest season, gray mold management will be critical, so sanitation and appropriate fungicide applications will be needed. Otherwise, preparations for watermelon planting and some early cantaloupes have been sown. Damage assessments on later variety peaches will continue.”

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report – May 02, 2022 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report – May 02, 2022

Zack Snipes reports, “It seems like everything happened all of a sudden this week. We are flushed with strawberries right now. I am seeing some anthracnose on berries and lots of spider mites. We only have a few weeks left in the season so take care of your crop to improve your bottom line. The tomato crop looks ok and, for the most part, disease-free. I saw a good number of issues on all types of squash this week. I received calls about yellowing and wilting squash. Upon further examination, we had a serious squash bug issue. They feed on the base of the plant and will make very healthy plants wilt. They are very good at hiding under the stems, in debris, or under the plastic, so stay still in one spot for a few minutes when scouting for them. I also found some powdery mildew on our squash.”

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report – September 12, 2022 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report – September 12, 2022

Rob Last reports, “Fall watermelons are looking good. There is some disease around, so fungicide applications remain crucial. I am finding whiteflies in a few crops too. As we move into Fall, with increasing numbers of misty mornings, scouting for diseases is going to be very important. Mists will increase periods of leaf wetness exacerbating disease pressures in crops. Scouting enables us to make timely applications. Thoughts are turning to planting Fall crops, and I urge everyone to check transplants carefully to minimize the risk of bringing infected plants into the fields, storing problems for the rest of the crop cycle.”

Flower Arranging in The French Style - hgic.clemson.edu - France - Germany
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

Flower Arranging in The French Style

I recently had the privilege of attending a presentation by Laura Dowling on arranging flowers in the French style. Laura was the Chief Floral Designer at the White House from 2009 to 2015. Her arrangements were inspiring, and the use of the materials was inventive and beautiful. She attended floral design schools in both Paris and Germany and has continued to pursue new techniques. She has also authored several books on flower arranging in the French style, featuring her design work at the White House. Laura shared her stories of working in the White House and other major events where she designed flower arrangements to create a magical background. Those two and a half hours encouraged me to think outside the box to create beautiful flower arrangements.

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report– February 27, 2023 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report– February 27, 2023

Rob Last reports, “After a warm week in the Lowcountry, we received some welcome showers. The rainfall will aid in cultivating and bed formation for spring crops. Beds should be firm, level, and well-consolidated with a clearly defined shoulder. These factors will aid in fertigation operations and plastic laying. Remember that a well-constructed bed should display an indentation of 0.5 to 1″ when a 150 lb. person stands in the center of the bed. Last week’s warm weather has pushed crops, with strawberries, blueberries, and peaches coming into flower. Spider mites are being found, particularly in strawberries. Vigilant scouting and applications of mite-specific products will likely be necessary. Again with strawberries, we see fruit set and development. Disease pressure currently is low, but we will see gray mold developing.”

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report – March 21, 2023 - hgic.clemson.edu
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023

SC Fruit and Vegetable Field Report – March 21, 2023

Sarah Scott reports, “Temperatures dropped below freezing along the Ridge two mornings last week. We’ve been checking peaches over the past few days to assess the damage. Right now, it seems a lot of early varieties will be hit pretty hard. Just from what I’ve checked, if there were still blooms present, there was some protection from the cold, but if there was no petal or shuck present, the fruit was very vulnerable and suffered damage. It will still take some time to know the extent of damage to the peach crop, but it is safe to say we did receive damage. We still have below-freezing temperatures in the forecast, so we will just have to wait a bit to really know the crop outlook. Strawberries were covered for the cold mornings last week. These crops look good after removing the covers. It’s important to maintain a good spray schedule and sanitation as best you can in between covering and uncovering.”

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