From Deseret News archives:
Grow berry delicious summer fruits
For best results, plant raspberries in a cooler spot
Who can resist these divine, sweet, melt-in-your-mouth berries straight from the patch, in jams, juices or other treats?
For more information on raspberries, I visited Weeks Berries of Paradise in Cache Valley.
Merv Weeks, his wife, Clara Jean, and three of his sons run the farm, which includes 25-30 acres of raspberries, three acres of blackberries, 10 acres of currants, two acres of strawberries and Utah's only commercial blueberry planting.
My association with Merv Weeks goes back many years. We attended Brigham Young University together and later completed master's degrees at Utah State University. It was while working and doing research there that Weeks got the idea to start his own fruit farm.
Weeks' first farm consisted of two acres of raspberries in Millville in 1974. He grew a test planting in Paradise and found the soil and the rural area more conducive to his crop and eventually moved there. In 1987, he left USU to become a full-time grower.
Weeks has seen almost every challenge and problem that occurs on small fruits, so he is well-qualified to share his knowledge on growing these delightful berries.
Part of the success of Weeks' farm is the location. Raspberries prefer cooler temperatures and are very cold-hardy. If you want to grow berries at your home, keep them away from the south or west sides of buildings that accumulate heat. Such areas stunt the plant growth and reduce berry size.
Look at the kind of raspberry you want to grow. Raspberries come in red, black and purple (a red-black hybrid) and yellow. The purple and black are not as cold-hardy.
Red raspberries are divided into single crop or summer-bearing plants and everbearing types that have a summer crop and a fall crop.
"Most homeowners should grow both the single crop and the everbearing types because that lets them have fresh raspberries for at least three months," Weeks said. If you don't want to deal with raspberries for that long of time, grow the summer crop berries and get them all at once, Weeks said.
Raspberries are perennial plants with biennial canes. With June-bearing cultivars, the fruit is born on two-year-old wood, and after it bears, it dies. Each spring gardeners should remove all the dead, gray and brittle canes at the base, leaving the living canes that will produce this year's crop.
Prune ever-bearing raspberries using one of two methods. If you want a large fall crop and no summer crop, mow all the canes back to 2 to 4 inches in the spring. If you want a summer and fall crop, prune them the same as June-bearing types.
As for variety, Weeks has tried many different ones over the years and sees the best and the worst of each.










