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Black raspberry

Rubus occidentalis L.

The cultivated Black Raspberry is Rubus occidentalis, an American species, and is not the same as the Red Raspberry (Rubus idaeus).

Info below is from /www.cnr.vt.edu. Leaf: Alternate, palmately compound, 3 to 5 leaflets with serrated margins, small prickles on petiole, light green above, paler below.

Flower: Greenish, small white petals, appearing in May, not showy.

Fruit: Juicy, black, multiple of drupes. When picked they separate from the fleshy core forming a hollow shell. Ripen in June to July.

Twig: Arching "canes" which generally live 2 years. Purplish-red with an abundance of white glaucous bloom and hooked prickles. Canes readily root at the tips when they contact the ground.

Form: Arching canes may reach 4 to 6 feet high, often forming tangles.

Black raspberries look much like blackberries, though black raspberries taste more like and are hollow like red raspberries.




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