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Raspberry Balsam is not particularly original; you cannot expect huge yields or unusual taste from it. But at the same time, the variety remains one of the most famous and memorable; raspberries have been successfully cultivated in the country’s gardens for several decades. The Balsam variety has a lot of advantages, and the most important of them is its suitability for cultivation throughout almost the entire territory of Russia.
A description of the Balsam raspberry variety, photos of bushes and reviews from gardeners can be found in this article. A set of positive qualities is listed here, as well as the disadvantages of the Balsam variety, and it tells how to grow such raspberries and how to properly care for them.
Characteristics of the variety
The description of the Balsam raspberry variety should begin with the fact that it was bred in Russia back in the early 80s of the last century. This crop is included in the State Register, which indicates its suitability for cultivation in local climatic conditions and successful agrotechnical tests.
Not all reviews about the Balsam variety are positive: many gardeners do not like the too primitive taste of the berries. But others consider this raspberry a classic with a natural aroma of forest berries.
A more detailed description of the Balsam variety:
- the bushes of this raspberry are spreading and erect;
- the height of the bushes can reach 170-180 cm;
- raspberry shoots are covered with small brown thorns;
- shoots are powerful, rather thick, annual shoots are light green, have a waxy coating, biennial shoots are brown, woody;
- Balsam's shoot formation and amount of shoots is average - this raspberry will not spread around the area, but it is very easy to propagate;
- leaves of a rich green hue, large, wrinkled, their lower part is pubescent and covered with a whitish coating;
- A distinctive feature of the Balsam raspberry is the presence of purple thorns along the main leaf veins;
- the variety’s yield reaches 2.2 kg per bush; on an industrial scale, up to 11 tons per hectare can be harvested;
- Balsam raspberries are not remontant; they bear fruit on two-year-old shoots;
- The berries ripen mid-early - from the end of June to the first ten days of July;
- Balsam berries ripen quickly and amicably, fruiting is short;
- the berry is colored in a dark crimson shade, closer to ruby;
- The fruit size is average - about three grams;
- the shape of Balsam berries is conical, wide;
- there is a slight coating on the surface of the raspberry fruit, and there is also slight pubescence;
- The density of the berries is good, they do not crumble for a long time, and are suitable for transportation and short-term storage;
- The taste of raspberry balm is sweet and sour, forest aroma;
- the variety is resistant to most fungal diseases and many infections, including purple leaf spot and spider mites;
- the crop tolerates drought, heat and early thaw well;
- Balsam raspberries are considered winter-hardy and suitable for cultivation throughout the country, except the Urals and Siberia.
Pros and cons of the variety
Despite its rather “advanced” age, Balsam raspberry remains popular among gardeners and summer residents. The variety has several undeniable advantages:
- good taste and medium size berries;
- resistance to weather conditions and diseases;
- early ripening;
- resistance to damping off, which is especially important in regions with early thaws;
- high yield.
Modern gardeners are tempted by new varieties of garden crops that delight with their unusual taste, remontability and other qualities, so many people find Balsam raspberry too simple and its taste bland.
It is also worth noting the fact that for high yields the bushes need to be well fed and thinned out regularly.
Planting raspberries
Raspberry Balsam is recommended for cultivation in private, medium and small farms. The agricultural technology used for this variety is the simplest. The interval between plants depends on the growing method:
- with classic planting of bushes, the distance between them should be 70-100 cm;
- the strip scheme for growing raspberries assumes an interval of 200-220 cm in a row;
- the bush method assumes a distance of 1.5 meters between the bushes.
The raspberry garden should be well ventilated, and each berry should have enough sunlight. Optimal rationing is 8-10 shoots per meter of land.
Before planting, the soil must be filled with fertilizers. Most often, organic matter is used: peat, humus, wood ash, rotted manure or chicken droppings. Fresh cow manure is not used in pre-planting preparation. It is good to combine organic matter with mineral fertilizers: superphosphate, nitroammophos.
The thickness of Balsam's shoots is sufficient, but a bountiful harvest of berries is quite capable of putting the stems on the ground, which will have a bad effect on the quality of the fruit and their integrity. Therefore, the raspberry tree will have to be tied up. There are several suitable ways:
- A wooden stake is driven into the center of each raspberry bush, to which all the shoots are tied.
- Fan fastening of raspberries involves the use of a pair of supports and a wire stretched between them. Then half of the bush is directed in one direction, and the second part of the raspberry is directed towards the opposite support.
- With the trellis method, raspberries are tied up in early spring, when the shoots are just starting to grow. The wire is stretched in three tiers (at a height of 60, 120 and 160 cm).
Raspberry pruning
Like any regular raspberry (bearing fruit once per season), Balsam must be pruned, and this will have to be done throughout the warm season.
Stages of pruning raspberry Balsam:
- Immediately after the end of raspberry fruiting, it is necessary to cut out all fruit-bearing shoots (two-year-old shoots covered with bark). These branches are taken away and burned so as not to provoke the spread of infections.
- In late autumn, remove all excess shoots, diseased and dry branches.
- From the beginning of summer it is necessary to remove the shoots from Balsam. This is done periodically using a sharp shovel.
- In mid-May, it is recommended to pinch the tops of two-year-old Balsam shoots to stimulate their branching.
- They also don’t forget about rationing, cutting out the weakest or smallest shoots in the row so that there are no more than a dozen of them left per linear meter.
- In the spring, raspberry shoots are inspected and branches that have rotted and rotted over the winter are removed.
How to feed raspberries
It is clear that without additional fertilization of the land there will be no good raspberry harvests, no matter how prolific the variety is. There should be several feedings per season:
- in early spring, when the buds begin to grow, the soil under the raspberries is fed with fertilizers containing nitrogen (nitroammophosphate, ammonium nitrate, urea).
- When buds appear on the Balsam bushes (but have not yet blossomed), the raspberries need to be fed with a mineral complex, in which potassium, calcium, phosphorus and iron predominate. At this stage, a lot of nitrogen is not required. It is better to use potassium preparations, superphosphate, and wood ash.
- At the fruiting stage of raspberries, it is recommended to use liquid mullein or bird droppings diluted in water - the bushes are watered with this mixture.
Preparing for winter
According to gardeners, the Balsam raspberry tolerates winters well in the southern and central regions - there is no need to cover it here, otherwise the shoots and buds will simply dry out. In areas with a continental climate and little snowy winters (in the Urals, around Moscow and St. Petersburg), it is better to bend the raspberry tree under the snow.
Balsam overwinters well under spruce or pine spruce branches. Before covering the shoots, they are tied and bent to the ground (as in the photo).
Review
Summary
Photos and descriptions of the Balsam raspberry variety should help gardeners decide. Practice shows that this culture is most suitable for the Central and Southern regions. It is better to grow raspberries on private farms or in limited quantities on farm plots.
The taste qualities of Balsam berries are not very high, but the fruits tolerate transportation well, have a high presentation, and are universal in use (frozen, preserves, jams, compotes, etc.).
It is not difficult to grow Balsam raspberries; it is quite simple to care for them. Do not neglect pruning; it is better to thin out the bushes, then the crop will not hurt and rot.If you feed the raspberry tree well, the harvest will be plentiful, and the berries will be large and beautiful.