Features and description of the raspberry variety "Firebird"
The demand for remontant raspberry varieties does not decrease seasonally, but increases annually. These include the Firebird variety, which is loved by summer residents and owners of suburban areas. And this is due to the excellent taste of its berries, unpretentiousness to growing conditions, as well as its compact size, which makes it possible to plant raspberries in large quantities in a small area. Numerous positive reviews from experienced gardeners using this raspberry confirm its popularity and high marks for the most important characteristics.
Description and characteristics
Raspberry "Firebird" refers to late-ripening berry crops and is a slightly sprawling plant with a powerful and tall bush. The height of the plant is from 180 to 200 centimeters. The leaves are pale green, slightly hairy and slightly wrinkled. The light brown stems are covered with a wax-like coating with medium-length spines. The berries on the bush begin to ripen by the second half of August.
Ripe berries weigh from four to six grams. They have the shape of an elongated cone, the color is light red, the taste is sweet and sour, the flesh is very tender. Harvest from one bush can reach 2.5 kilograms. Berries contain up to 2% organic acids, up to 6% carbohydrates and up to 45 milligrams of vitamin C.
Many delicious and fragrant products can be prepared from raspberries of this variety: jam, compote, jam, wine, juice and others.
Pros and cons
The positive qualities of the "Firebird" include the following:
- fruits have a good presentation, excellent aroma and taste;
- the plant does not need pollinators (self-fertile species);
- the berries are firm, making it edible even after rain.
The disadvantages include features such as:
- heat-loving variety;
- high demands on moisture, in case of a lack of water in the soil, the berries dry out and become hard;
- late ripening - at the end of August, and therefore, in cases of early cooling, part of the crop can be lost.
The last indicated minus determines the distribution areas of this raspberry. It is most grown in the southern regions of the country, where the conditions for its high-quality ripening and high yields are considered the most favorable.
Planting a bush or seedling
Raspberries love light and warmth. For planting it is necessary to use well-lit places of the site, protected from the wind, with cultivated loamy soil. The soil at the planting site, given the moisture-loving variety, should be moist, but without an excess of moisture (not a swamp). Choosing a site for raspberries on the principle of just what grew in this waste place is not the best option. With such an attitude to business, it will turn out even worse: you won’t be able to wait for a good harvest, and the site will overgrow more than before, and besides, with thorny vegetation.
You can plant raspberries in warm weather in spring or autumn. A higher survival rate of raspberry bushes was noted during autumn planting. The reason is the long rooting of the bush in the spring. In autumn, planting should be completed about three weeks before the onset of frosty days. Pits for seedlings and bushes are best prepared 3-4 weeks before planting. And if spring planting is planned, then holes should be dug in the fall.
The area where the raspberry will be located must be carefully dug up on a bayonet, removing along the way all the garbage, the roots of other shrubs, trees and weeds. Place the pits from each other in a row at a distance of 0.5 meters for seedlings and 1 m for bushes. If both bushes and seedlings are available, then it is more correct to plant them in separate rows. The distance between rows should be at least 1 meter for seedlings and 1.5 meters for bushes.
Tapestry placement of bushes is the most used variant of raspberries in practice. To do this, poles are installed at the end of each row, and a trellis (rope, wire) is stretched between them, to which raspberry bushes are attached.
Landing Rules
When planting the "Firebird" raspberry variety, the following work algorithm should be followed:
- the depth of the pits for the seedling should be at least 35 cm, diameter - 40 cm;
- half of the hole before planting should be filled with a fertile mixture of humus with mineral fertilizers: 50 g of potassium sulfate and 150 g of superphosphate. If the soil is acidic, then you can add 200 g of wood ash;
- sprinkle the fertile layer with a small layer of soil (5–10 cm);
- insert a seedling with a stem cut to a length of 30-40 cm into the hole, straighten the roots;
- from above to the edges of the pit, you need to fill the roots with a layer of a fertile mixture of soil and humus;
- compact the soil around the seedling or bush;
- water the planted plant abundantly (slowly, so that the soil is completely saturated with moisture);
- mulch the surface of the hole in order to better retain moisture in the soil. You can mulch with chopped grass, peat or dry humus, and sawdust is also suitable.
When planting, it is necessary to ensure that the root neck of the plant is on the surface of the soil.Organic fertilizers (manure, for example) are best placed in the topmost layer of soil to fill holes with a planted plant. It is necessary to avoid direct contact with manure and the roots of the seedling, because raspberries do not like this.
Care
Caring for a raspberry bush is a matter that needs to be given special importance if a rich harvest is planned from the raspberry. Raspberry care includes the following:
- periodic top dressing during plant development, fruiting and after harvesting;
- ensuring normal soil moisture under plants during the growing season;
- pruning shrubs after harvesting in the fall;
- protection of plants from freezing during the winter months.
Periodic top dressing
Plants are fed with mullein or chicken manure diluted with water. The rate of dilution of mullein with water is 1: 10, chicken manure - 1: 20. But before watering the plants with solutions, they need to be given 2 days for infusion. For 1 raspberry bush, you need to use 3 liters of the resulting infusion.
In addition to organics, mineral fertilizers should be included in top dressing: in spring and summer - nitrogen, phosphorus and potash, in autumn - only phosphorus and potash (nitrogen has a bad effect on preparing the plant for wintering).
Watering
Watering plants especially need to be monitored during periods of their flowering and formation of ovaries. The lack of moisture forces raspberries to drop flowers and ovaries in order to somehow balance the flow of water to the plant from the soil and its consumption for the processes necessary for life. In dry times, a bucket of water is required for 1 bush, while it is better to water it 2 times a day (in the morning, while it is not hot, and in the evening, when the heat subsides). After watering during a drought period, the soil should be mulched to reduce the evaporation of moisture.In normal times, without an established drought, it is not necessary to mulch after watering, but it should be watered at least once every 2-3 days (a bucket of water per 1 plant).
These watering rules are not a monumental norm for a gardener. A person has eyes, hands and a tool that can be used to check the degree of soil moisture under the plant. The soil should not dry out, it should be moist to a depth of 40 cm.
After the next collection of berries from the bush, it must be watered, then there will be time to make another collection before the next watering.
Pruning shrubs and shelter for the winter
This raspberry variety in the southern regions of the country is capable of producing 2 crops per year. It is for this reason that local gardeners leave shoots for the winter, pinning them to the ground and protecting them from the cold with suitable covering material. In areas of central Russia, two crops cannot be obtained, so it is better to cut all raspberries about 3–4 cm from the soil surface.
If you want an earlier harvest, then you can take a chance by cutting off only the fruit-bearing branches and leaving the young ones. Such branches are more flexible and easily bend down to the ground. Pin them and also cover all rows of raspberries with covering material. In the spring, dead stems are cut out, on which there will be no swelling buds. Autumn pruning is done from October to November, spring - at the end of April.
Reviews
According to reviews, the "Firebird" is indeed a popular variety of remontant raspberries. Among the reviews on gardening sites and forums, such positive points are noted as:
- good taste of berries and home-made products from it;
- good survival rate during planting and transplanting;
- uniformity of ripe berries (size, shape);
- unpretentiousness in care (except for watering).
There are practically no negative reviews, since gardeners like this variety, it is used in many places, including the northern ones, it is capable of producing two crops in the warm regions of the country, and is also suitable for home-made preparations for the winter.
For the secrets of growing raspberries of the "Firebird" variety, see the following video.