Bush Berries Young Plants

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Bush Berries Young Plants

Showing 166 of 166 products

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For those who come too early...new data on berry demand AFTER spring

For those who come too early...new data on berry demand AFTER spring

Traditionally, soft fruit plants are delivered to sales outlets and sold off in early spring. Depending on the season, there may or may not be additional deliveries. Using Google data, we show that the demand for certain types of fruit (or the corresponding terms) is sometimes continuous throughout the year or that there is a second peak after spring when the fruit in question is ripe. But can this effect also be demonstrated in specific plant sales? Are we perhaps systematically selling many...

Plants and demographic change – edible plants as a connecting link to the younger generation

Plants and demographic change – edible plants as a connecting link to the younger generation

In the plant industry, we like to lean back comfortably and contentedly when we hear about demographic change. After all, it can't harm us...Older people are increasingly or at least steadily buying plants...but is this prejudice really true?

Raspberries 2023 – the ranking of varieties, growth types, fruit colours and plant sizes

Raspberries 2023 – the ranking of varieties, growth types, fruit colours and plant sizes

In the stationary market, the sales figures for the most important soft fruit variety, raspberries, are largely supply-driven: ultimately, what is sold is what buyers purchase and then what is offered at the points of sale. With the online range of our sister company Lubera.com, the situation is largely reversed: we sell what is in demand.

From mid-February until Christmas, a wide range of 36 raspberry varieties is continuously available. According to the sales figures at Lubera.com, we can...

The demand for berry plants

The demand for berry plants

Actually, no one really knows the exact demand for berry plants. The market is too small for a statistically analysable survey to be worthwhile. By interpreting the sales figures of our online sister company Lubera.com for this small study, we can gain important insights into the natural demand for berry plants.

The demand for fruit and berry plants compared to previous years

The demand for fruit and berry plants compared to previous years

If you talk to professional colleagues and market participants at the moment, you hear very little good news: the demand has collapsed; plants are not selling like expected and they are not being reordered. Of course, we are also feeling this subdued mood in the sale of young plants from Lubera Edibles. We therefore want to dig a little deeper to find out more about consumer demand. Are the consumers much less interested in berries and fruit plants than in previous years? Have they, at best...

Berryfication – how can we produce and sell fruit trees like berries?

Berryfication – how can we produce and sell fruit trees like berries?

The following considerations begin with the observation that berry plants sell much faster on the market than fruit trees. But why is that, what are the reasons for it? And wouldn't there perhaps also be fruit trees that we could promote like berry plants with the right sales arguments and the right production? Can we “berrify” fruit trees? And because it sounds nice, we have invented a new word and concept: the “berryfication” of fruit trees...

Figs for brave gardeners – the solution to (almost) all fig problems

Figs for brave gardeners – the solution to (almost) all fig problems

Actually, the fig should be a perfect candidate for a climate-resilient plant for our northern gardens: it knows how to deal with heat and deficiency situations, it can manage with very little water, and it reacts immediately to narrow root space and lack of mineralisation with compact growth. If it dies above ground (because it got too cold in the winter, for example), it usually regenerates from the rootstock without any problems. But as always, when a plant has travelled a very long way in...

Dwarf figs – do dwarf figs or compact fig trees exist at all?

Dwarf figs – do dwarf figs or compact fig trees exist at all?

Again and again dwarf figs or (very) compact growing figs appear on the market, some of which are said to remain below one metre in height. It is striking that for promotion and as an illustration, drawings with an infinite number of fruits on as many short shoots as possible are often shown and that in photographic material and in videos, figs are actually always shown in pots or containers. In this article we will look into the question of whether and how compact growing fig trees or fig...

The standard berry and its alternatives

The standard berry and its alternatives

The 2 to 3 litre pot, tall and usually square, has become the standard in berry plant production. If you wander through the garden centres in the spring and analyse the offers with a gardener's eye, all you see is always the same: almost the same pot, with a slightly different but always large label, nota bene with as little information as possible. It is a well-known fact that customers cannot read. At least that's what our advertising consultants seem to think. Garden centres are no better. I...

Wild fruit breeding at Lubera®

Wild fruit breeding at Lubera®

Unknown or little-known, hardly noticed fruit species are also worked on in the Lubera breeding programme. But why do we care about the obscure, little demanded, often not directly edible berry and fruit species, when we could possibly invest more in raspberry breeding? In this article, Markus Kobelt shows the importance of wild fruit species in the Lubera breeding programme and also describes in concrete terms the objectives for which research is carried out on the various wild fruit species.

Lubera Edibles Podcast #20: Gardener's talk: How do I produce blueberries in containers?

Lubera Edibles Podcast #20: Gardener's talk: How do I produce blueberries in containers?

The demand for blueberries has increased significantly in recent years, not only for blueberries in the food retail trade, where blueberries have now replaced strawberries as the most popular soft fruit in terms of kilograms sold. A steadily increasing demand can also be observed for blueberry plants that are commercially available. This can only be explained by the fact that blueberries as a fruit are something like 'everybody’s darling', i.e. they appeal to (almost) every palate. And the...

Lubera Edibles Podcast #19: Gardener's talk: How do I produce raspberries? The intricacies of raspberry cultivation

Lubera Edibles Podcast #19: Gardener's talk: How do I produce raspberries? The intricacies of raspberry cultivation

Since it is the strongest crop in terms of numbers and therefore also the most important, the raspberry is the focus of attention at both Lubera® and Lubera Edibles, whether in breeding, young plant production or finished product production. The raspberry is and remains our 'bread and butter' crop. Because of this significant position, we cannot avoid dedicating a separate podcast to the production of raspberry plants. Even if you already produce raspberry plants it is worth listening in –...

Raspberry breeding at Lubera – the reinvention of the raspberry for the garden

Raspberry breeding at Lubera – the reinvention of the raspberry for the garden

Raspberry breeding has been one of the largest breeding programmes at Lubera for over 20 years. Ultimately, only apple breeding is even older, which basically began when the company was founded in 1993. The first goal of raspberry breeding was simple and overdue: it was to replace the dominant Autumn Bliss raspberry with better varieties. To do this, we crossed Autumn Bliss with Tulameen together with Reto Neuweiler from the Wädenswil Research Station – this then resulted in the Autumn...

Mini kiwis – a plant portrait

Mini kiwis – a plant portrait

Who doesn't know the kiwi fruit from the supermarket? With its green or even yellow flesh and brown, slightly hairy skin, with its typical sour-sweet taste and exotic aroma?

But who knows the small-fruited relative of the kiwi fruit, the mini kiwi? Nurserymen and hobby gardeners, but also people interested in fruit will have heard of the mini kiwi, sometimes also called kiwi berry. But in the grocery store you will usually look in vain for them. If at all, the mini kiwi is only to be found in...

Confi® berries – new jostaberry that we need!

Confi® berries – new jostaberry that we need!

The horticultural or breeding vision of combining blackcurrants with gooseberries has existed since the end of the 19th century. The aim of these first crossing attempts was to combine the fruitiness and fruit size of gooseberries with the aroma of blackcurrants. In addition, this new fruit variety was also to have tolerance to American gooseberry powdery mildew.  However, these first attempts were not successful...

The Lubera® breeders were by no means the first to work on jostaberries. In the...

The production of kiwi plants outdoors

The production of kiwi plants outdoors

Since kiwi plants are mainly cultivated in protected areas, the title sounds a bit strange at first. However, a coincidence that occurred while producing kiwi plants at our partner company Lubera at the Bad Zwischenahn site has shown that this idea is not as far-fetched as it might seem at first glance.

Blackberry varieties – an overview of our range

Blackberry varieties – an overview of our range

Blackberry varieties are among the most important young plant crops. With our growing assortment, which meanwhile includes more than 20 different varieties, it is easy to lose track of them. This article is intended to introduce you to our wide range of blackberry varieties and to structure them for a better overview.

The range of soft fruit young plants

The range of soft fruit young plants

This video explains all about the young berry plant range from 'Lubera Edibles. These include: blackberries, strawberries, raspberries, kiwis and gooseberries. 'Lubera Edibles' is the young plant division of Lubera, it provides a large selection of delicious fruit varieties to growers. The companies of Robert Mayer and Lubera have joined forces to produce these young plants through the breeding of new edible varieties at Lubera which are then coordinated with the product development and in-vitro...