The impact of severity and time of tipping and hedging on performance of primocane-fruiting blackberry in a tunnel

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Abstract

Summer pruning systems were compared for 'Prime-Jan'® primocanefruiting blackberry (Rubus subgenus Rubus) grown in a fully closed, plastic covered tunnel in Aurora, OR. Individual canes were soft-tipped (by removing 0.10 m) or hard-tipped (removing 0.45 m) to a 1-m height on each of four dates in 2008 and 2009. On average, canes that were hard-tipped produced more branches and had more fruit/cane than soft-tipped canes. Canes that were tipped early (22-27 June) produced more fruit/cane than those tipped later (7-24 July). When canes were hard-tipped early in the season, the number of fruit/cane was increased threefold compared with soft-tipping canes early. In contrast, when plots were hedged to 1-m tall lightly ("soft" hedge removing 0.10 m) on 22-27 June or more severely ("hard" hedge, removing 0.45 m) on 29 June-2 July, using shears, there was no significant effect on yield/plot. The hard-hedge treatments may have performed better if they had been done earlier or at the same time as the soft-hedge treatments; this would only have been possible if canes had been cut back (hedged) to a shorter height than 1 m. Hard hedging, done ≈1 week later than soft hedging, delayed the fruiting season by 10-14 days. Fruit harvest continued until early to mid-November. Daily average air temperature in the closed tunnel was 2-7 °F warmer than the outside and fruit were protected from autumn rainfall. Hard-tipping individual canes, by hand, or hedging primocanes mechanically early in the season shows promise in this crop for maximizing economic returns.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Strik, B. C., & Buller, G. (2012). The impact of severity and time of tipping and hedging on performance of primocane-fruiting blackberry in a tunnel. HortTechnology, 22(3), 325–329. https://doi.org/10.21273/horttech.22.3.325

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