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Coventry, Warwickshire, England

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THE HYBRID BRAMBLE BERRIES

... phenomenal berries are as reliable croppers as the British blackberries. The loganberry is a hybrid between the red raspberry and the blackberry. There are crosses between the loganberry and the blackberry, and between the loganberry and the red raspberry. The ...

Published: Friday 28 September 1917
Newspaper: Coventry Graphic
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 131 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

CROSS CHEAPING, COVENTRY

... stout trowel, one week-end, will leave a margin of profit. The brambles bear their best fruit on their one-year-old stems. Blackberries and all brambles crop the first season following planting, and no pruning is require before this first crop. Afterwards ...

Published: Friday 28 September 1917
Newspaper: Coventry Graphic
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 180 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

Horticulture for Pleasure and Profit, By EDWIN DALLMAN PAGE, F.R.H.S. THE FOOD GARDEN, TOWN FRUITS. “ Our ..

... that is necessary in the way of feeding. ' THE BLACKBERRIES. The native blackberries, and the other blackberries, are dessert as well as culinary fruits. We would like to commend the ordinary blackberry—that wild, bramble fruit of the hedgerows of our ...

Published: Friday 28 September 1917
Newspaper: Coventry Graphic
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 546 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

BRAMBLE CULTIVATION

... for the first summer will be obtained through the autumn planting. Often there is no need to go to the expense of buying blackberry plants. The edges abound with ...

Published: Friday 28 September 1917
Newspaper: Coventry Graphic
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 71 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

Horticulture for Pleasure and Profit. By EDWIN DALLMAN PAGE, F.R.H.B. THE FOOD GARDEN

... cherries) classes. Then there are bush fruits—currants and gooseberries; the brambles — raspberries, lowberries, logans, blackberries, etc.; and a fourth group can be made of the strawberries. Until the end of next month is the autumn planting season. ‘Winter ...

Published: Friday 12 October 1917
Newspaper: Coventry Graphic
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 587 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

THE EDITOR’'S POST BAG

... National Food Journal ” devotes congiderable space to the above subject, and gives the subjoined recipes for jams:— BLACKBERRY JAM : 2lb. blackberries; 1141 b. sugar, or Ilb. sugar and 14lb. glucose. Remove the stalks from the fruit and see that it is quite clean ...

Published: Friday 16 August 1918
Newspaper: Coventry Graphic
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 439 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

% = Topical Tabloids. = =

... and later on there comes a time when she ends by accepting his excuses. There is a prospect of a good blackberry crop this year, so that blackberry pickers will later on be able to come up to the scratch. s 8 2 8 The ** Berliner Tageblatt” refers to the ...

Published: Friday 23 August 1918
Newspaper: Coventry Graphic
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 789 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

70)-

... beans. improvement), the loganberry (a cross between a raspberry and a blackberry), the laxtonberry (loganberry crossed raspberry), and the lowberry (loganberry crossed blackberry). Our opinion is that the logan is “the ” culinary fruit, whilst the laxton ...

Published: Friday 27 September 1918
Newspaper: Coventry Graphic
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 371 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

THE BRAMBLE BERRIES

... thing. The most popular of the brambles for garden and allotment cultivation are the common blackberry of the hedgerows, the cut or parsley-leaved blackberry (a slight ...

Published: Friday 27 September 1918
Newspaper: Coventry Graphic
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 41 | Page: 12 | Tags: none

COVENTRY

... brought into fame the ordinary blackberry—that wild fruit of the hedgerows of our Isles. Years before popular recognition we cultivated this wild bramble in our gardens. Those who have never seen a plateful of cultivated blackberries cannot imagine the difference ...

Published: Friday 08 November 1918
Newspaper: Coventry Graphic
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 632 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

their manner of producing clean, lengthy stems, which canes only crop for one season, put them in this category ..

... food from the vegetable‘the maggot from the apple—than buy ‘the choicest apples off the greengrocer. Blackberries, and hybrid berries (the blackberry crossed by a red raspberry) will flourish almost anywhere, and in partial shade and full sunshine, and ...

Published: Friday 08 November 1918
Newspaper: Coventry Graphic
County: Warwickshire, England
Type: Article | Words: 146 | Page: 10 | Tags: none