News
Mulberry tree with developing fruitJefferson County Cooperative Extension By Sallie Lee Q: Talking with a neighbor who is into "edible gardens", the term "blackberry tree" was mentioned. I said ...
The mulberry looks like an elongated version of the more popular blackberry, almost conifer shaped, and grows on several species of the tree. There’s the red mulberry, Morus rubra, a species ...
Left unpruned, native red mulberry can reach 65 feet in height in humus-rich, well drained soil. The reddish-brown bark was ridged and fissured. Heart shaped, toothed, 4-inch leaves had white hair ...
I remember the first time I saw a mulberry tree. Growing up in South Florida, we were used to oranges, grapefruit, mangos and avocadoes. But… a blackberry that grew on a tree? Wild! I was 10 ...
I am always amazed by how often one sees a mulberry tree growing in a public park where visitors do not recognise its virtues, do not stop to ask its name, do not step underneath it and do not reach ...
This fruiting tree has grown from a cutting that Peter Lynch stuck direct in the ground in December, 2019. (ABC Rural: Jennifer Nichols)"I thought 'I'll start early, I'll start growing some ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results