BLACKBERRYING

... BLACKBERRYING. The sun is up in a bright blue sky, And all the world's aglow. Come fetch your baskets, girls and boys, For a-blackberrying we'll go. I know a spot where the ripe fruit hangs, Luscious and black as sloe, Below the stream, round the hazel-copes ...

Published: Friday 01 October 1909
Newspaper: Midlothian Advertiser
County: West Lothian, Scotland
Type: | Words: 76 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

BLACKBERRY . INDUSTRY

... engaged in the business , it is evident that . the blackberry . growing , industry o £ the ' . country is becoming of some importance . . THE BLACKBERRY IN LEGEND . One of the-most ; prolific blackberries grown in America , where tlie fruit has for years ...

Published: Monday 31 July 1905
Newspaper: The Scotsman
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1112 | Page: 10 | Tags: none

THE BLACKBERRY SEASON

... firms . ' Blackberry ] 9 / a is very popular ; heretofore the demand has exceeded the supply , which is necessarily liinitect because . quantities , of the berries are disposed of to the public by fruiterers by the pound . Often punneted blackberries of good ...

Published: Tuesday 16 August 1904
Newspaper: The Scotsman
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 742 | Page: 8 | Tags: none

THE BLACKBERRIES,

... plants keep on flowering, The wild blackberry, the cut-leaved variety (the parsley-leaf blackberry), Himalayan Giant, and the American varieties are dessert as well as culinary fruits. The parsley-leaf blackberry has similar-sized fruits, too, but thinner ...

BLACKBERRIES

... BLACKBERRIES. II any of the American blackberries are excellent fruits. Strong, well-drained clay soils are best; but the plants thrive almost anywhere. .Where possible, a cool exposure is desirable. On good soils manure will be needed until Ihe plants ...

BLACKBERRIES

... reasons why apples and blackberries combine so well in jam and jelly— not only do the flavours blend, 'but the apples supply the pectin which is lacking in the blackberries. It is pectin which makes jam set. If the blackberries are to be jammed alone ...

Published: Tuesday 24 September 1940
Newspaper: Brechin Advertiser
County: Angus, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 706 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

THE BLACKBERRIES

... THE BLACKBERRIES. Stolen sweets are always sweeter. -.Nolen kisses law+ completer. Si..leti looks are nice' 'impels. Vet the fruit were scarce worth taking Were it not for stealing, stealing. Bear fruit has increased the popularity the ordinary blac ...

Published: Wednesday 03 December 1924
Newspaper: Perthshire Advertiser
County: Perthshire, Scotland
Type: | Words: 161 | Page: 25 | Tags: none

THE BLACKBERRIES

... THE BLACKBERRIES. Years before the recognition of the fruit of the hedgerows—the wild blackberry—as a garden crop, the flavour of really ripe berries was appreciated. The difference between a plateful of cultivated blackberries and the dusty s mall fruits ...

The Blackberry

... The Blackberry. In recent years the blackberry has been largely cultivated for its fruits, and it is an ideal subject for covering up rough fences and trellises or training up poles arranged as a tripod and brought together at the top to a height of 8 ...

BLACKBERRY AND

... BLACKBERRY AND APPLE SHORTCAKE (For 4). 6 oz. plain flour and 3 level teasps. baking powder; or 6 oz. selfraising flour;pinch salt; loz. margarine; 1 leveldessertsp. sugar; I level dessertsp. honey; 6 I tablesps. milk and water. Filling: 6 level tabl ...

Published: Wednesday 30 August 1950
Newspaper: Falkirk Herald
County: Stirlingshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 324 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

AND BLACKBERRIES

... AND BLACKBERRIES The September holiday saw the , usual exodus from the town of groups of hopeful berrypiekers. The fruit is plentiful this year and good 'hauls' are reported, but, queries Jemima— Where is the sugar to come from. ...

Blackberries

... Blackberries. At several places on our tour we passed along lanes flanked on either side with bramble bushes all hanging rich with fruit quickly ripening. What a harvest we thought, was here for the picking . But, alas for the pence the pickers might ...