• Eventual height: 2m
  • Eventual spread: 1.8m

raspberry 'Tulameen'

raspberry Tulameen - summer fruiting

5 year guarantee RHS award of garden merit Perfect for pollinators
40% OFF SELECTED bare root fruit
20% OFF plants
5 × bare root canes £16.99 £10.19
PL30002419
£16.99 £10.19
PL30005538
£50.97 £20.39
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  • Standard £5.95
  • Named Day £10.95

This plant is deciduous so it will lose all its leaves in autumn, then fresh new foliage appears again each spring.

  • Position: full sun
  • Soil: fertile, well-drained soil
  • Rate of growth: fast-growing
  • Hardiness: fully hardy

    Very large, dark pink fruits with a distinctive, conical shape and a deliciously sweet taste, appear in abundance on the vigorous canes which have long lateral shoots making them very easy to pick. This mid- to late season cultivar tolerates a wide range of growing conditions.

  • Garden care: Supplied as bare root canes. Find a sunny spot and prepare a bed by clearing it of weeds and digging in lots of composted manure. The canes will need to be tied onto a sturdy support, so if you have the space, hammer in two robust tree stakes about 3m apart and string two or three heavy-gauge wires between them. Dig a wide, shallow trench, sprinkle with bonemeal and plant the canes at 45cm intervals, (subsequent rows should be 1.8m apart), carefully spreading out the roots and back-filling with soil. You should be able to see the old soil mark on the stems, so aim to replant the same depth. After planting cut the canes back to around 15cm from their base and apply a generous layer of mulch in spring. As the new canes emerge, they can be tied onto their support as they grow. Feed during the growing season with a general purpose fertiliser and water regularly during the summer. You may need to protect the ripening fruit from being eaten by birds. Plants fruit on one-year-old wood, so the new canes need to be separated from the fruiting ones. The easiest way to do this is to tie in the new canes onto one side of the wire, keeping the fruiting stems on the other. After cropping, cut the fruiting canes down to the ground and tie in the new ones that have grown that year.
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