Just bought a house with these wine berry brambles all around the perimeter of one side of the yard. Excited to try the fruit! So glad I found this channel too.
I live in New Jersey and I just found this a few houses down growing on land! Picked them and they are delicious! Im going to try to cut a piece a put in a planter.
Great info and was unaware of how they propagated like that. Found my first patches in Connecticut this year. Love eating them frozen and what I noticed is the berries that look unripe do not impart a puckering effect like with unripe red raspberries or blackberries. That was what I noticed for a distinction. So if you see a lighter colored berry like almost orange and if it comes off easy will still taste good. Well it does so with me as everyone’s tastes are different. I want to make some pemmican with them when I get raw organic grass-fed butter and mix with raw meat.
Been picking these little treasures for 40 years around my land. Always knew of them as wild raspberries. Old fella just today saw me tending to 60 transplants I put in beside the house and told me they’re wineberry. We are both right because they are in the raspberry family and folks call them Japanese raspberry too. I loved you fantastic explanation of them. Thank you sir! I been making wineberry brandy for many moons. Gotta be my favorite shine.
@@rustingsun If you know how to make wine, you’re half way there. Our family recipe is a bit of a secret but if you make a big old batch of wineberry wine and run it through a well built still, then oak it a bit and let her set quite a spell you’ll get pretty dang close to a heavenly sippin’ nectar. Of course running a still would be illegal so you’d be doin’ it all simply fer the pleasure of making your own ethanol fuel if ya know what I mean. My engine’s been runnin’ smooth on ethanol fer years!
@@ldlink3935 Absolutely! Picked 35 pounds this year. Froze some, ate a bunch with cream and sugar, made some jelly, and of course my wineberry brandy. Eat ‘em up, they don’t last long before they’re done for the year.
I found a couple of very nice stands of these in central NYS, just east of Cayuga Lake, south of King Ferry. Delectably delicious! I'm glad to hear that these ARE controllable - I'd read that they're considered rampant, aggressively invasive, taking over wherever they're allowed entrance. I love the jewel-like colors of the ripe berries!
Yeah. I’m located just 20 minutes from mountain gardens, and here wine berry is I believe technically considered invasive. I’ve definitely seen patches of escaped wine berry, but never an amount that could threaten native plant populations. I have some in my garden and they are far more controllable than raapberries
After I took some cuttings from a plant in Roderfield WV I have a patch of them growing myself.What I find amazing is that they're pollinated by Insects.
@@sn232 I took cuttings and put them is a pan of sandy soil and put them in a shady spot for a year.They were struggling to survive so I tossed them over the hill dirt and all and they lived LOl I have them growing all over the place now.The birds have scattered the seeds!LOL
Not sure that these berries do not spread by root. I have tiny sprouts growing about 20cm from the main plants. The color is also a bit different: more light green. All the ones I have seen here in France are the same color.
These are my favorite berries. They grow wild everywhere in my town including 1 in my garden. I'm gonna leave it. I was thinking of creating a living fence
I thought wine berry's had white under the leaves. I did not see that with his. What are the ones with red stalks and white under the leaves? One of those popped up this year and I wasn't sure whether to cut it down - as I heard they were invasive in the northeast. I'll keep it one more year: no fruit, out it goes.
It grows here in Preston County W.V. and I'm roughly a half hour drive from both the Pennsylvania and Maryland state lines, so I assume it grows in those states as well. Always thought it was Red Raspberry, but it looked a little odd and out of place.
Yes, im in sw va also. I've never noticed them anywhere else in the area before(probably b/c i want paying attention)but there's a patch of them growing across the rd. Think I'll get some cuttings & see what happens. I can't believe the deer don't eat them.
Another difference from a raspberry is that it's very shiny. It doesn't have the fuzzy texture of raspberry. Very smooth. They're about to bloom here in VA shortly, pretty excited.
I was happy when I first saw some years ago. But it is terribly invasive in my area. It has outcompeted the native blackberries and I hardly find them anymore.
This guy is awesome. He needs a tv series.
Just bought a house with these wine berry brambles all around the perimeter of one side of the yard. Excited to try the fruit!
So glad I found this channel too.
I’m so happy I got these growing along my fence, here in West Haven, Connecticut
I live in New Jersey and I just found this a few houses down growing on land! Picked them and they are delicious! Im going to try to cut a piece a put in a planter.
We have these in Northern Virginia
Awesome video! Just bought a house here in Connecticut & I have about 6-7 individual ones in our backyard. Extremely delicious !
They are delicious huh, I best describe it is bright red fruity flavor with a lemon twist at the end
Great info and was unaware of how they propagated like that. Found my first patches in Connecticut this year. Love eating them frozen and what I noticed is the berries that look unripe do not impart a puckering effect like with unripe red raspberries or blackberries. That was what I noticed for a distinction. So if you see a lighter colored berry like almost orange and if it comes off easy will still taste good. Well it does so with me as everyone’s tastes are different.
I want to make some pemmican with them when I get raw organic grass-fed butter and mix with raw meat.
Been picking these little treasures for 40 years around my land. Always knew of them as wild raspberries. Old fella just today saw me tending to 60 transplants I put in beside the house and told me they’re wineberry. We are both right because they are in the raspberry family and folks call them Japanese raspberry too. I loved you fantastic explanation of them. Thank you sir! I been making wineberry brandy for many moons. Gotta be my favorite shine.
Where do you get a recipe for something like that?
@@rustingsun If you know how to make wine, you’re half way there. Our family recipe is a bit of a secret but if you make a big old batch of wineberry wine and run it through a well built still, then oak it a bit and let her set quite a spell you’ll get pretty dang close to a heavenly sippin’ nectar. Of course running a still would be illegal so you’d be doin’ it all simply fer the pleasure of making your own ethanol fuel if ya know what I mean. My engine’s been runnin’ smooth on ethanol fer years!
@@saltwateranglin Thanks my friend! Happy driving!
can you just eat these raw....one popped up along my fence...
@@ldlink3935 Absolutely! Picked 35 pounds this year. Froze some, ate a bunch with cream and sugar, made some jelly, and of course my wineberry brandy. Eat ‘em up, they don’t last long before they’re done for the year.
I found a couple of very nice stands of these in central NYS, just east of Cayuga Lake, south of King Ferry. Delectably delicious! I'm glad to hear that these ARE controllable - I'd read that they're considered rampant, aggressively invasive, taking over wherever they're allowed entrance. I love the jewel-like colors of the ripe berries!
Yeah. I’m located just 20 minutes from mountain gardens, and here wine berry is I believe technically considered invasive. I’ve definitely seen patches of escaped wine berry, but never an amount that could threaten native plant populations. I have some in my garden and they are far more controllable than raapberries
Thank you for this.
I just picked up two plants.
I hope you, your family, and garden are doing well.
After I took some cuttings from a plant in Roderfield WV I have a patch of them growing myself.What I find amazing is that they're pollinated by Insects.
Did you take your cuttings and root in water first then how did you plant them?
@@sn232 I took cuttings and put them is a pan of sandy soil and put them in a shady spot for a year.They were struggling to survive so I tossed them over the hill dirt and all and they lived LOl I have them growing all over the place now.The birds have scattered the seeds!LOL
@@Yeshuaschosen Thank you! I did not know if you had to root them in water first or not :)
I love your videos, but I don't speak English very well, I can't understand everything, but your voice is beautiful!! Thank you so much
one of my favorites!
Not sure that these berries do not spread by root. I have tiny sprouts growing about 20cm from the main plants. The color is also a bit different: more light green. All the ones I have seen here in France are the same color.
These are my favorite berries. They grow wild everywhere in my town including 1 in my garden. I'm gonna leave it. I was thinking of creating a living fence
Found a patch of them out on my ridge, south-east Indiana.
How are they doing now? Have they taken over the area?
@@wompbozer3939 They're doing fine, self contained so far.
Awesome thanks
I've seen this before and always wondered what this was. A lot of this grows in upstate NY.
It’s in southern Virginia too
I thought wine berry's had white under the leaves. I did not see that with his. What are the ones with red stalks and white under the leaves? One of those popped up this year and I wasn't sure whether to cut it down - as I heard they were invasive in the northeast. I'll keep it one more year: no fruit, out it goes.
It grows here in Preston County W.V. and I'm roughly a half hour drive from both the Pennsylvania and Maryland state lines, so I assume it grows in those states as well. Always thought it was Red Raspberry, but it looked a little odd and out of place.
We've got em in virginia all along the roads. Delicious.
3:01 such astonishing trichomes
Yeah it's really pretty. It looks like the trichome-type of carnivorous plants.
Trichy🏄
About how far do you trim these back? I was wanting to know if I trim them back for the winter if it would ruin them.
Grows in middle Tennessee also.
Looks a lot like Loganberries we used to find in WV.
Very informative, thank you!
tons in baltimore co. md
We have it in SW VA.
Yes, im in sw va also. I've never noticed them anywhere else in the area before(probably b/c i want paying attention)but there's a patch of them growing across the rd. Think I'll get some cuttings & see what happens. I can't believe the deer don't eat them.
I've seen them all over central Jersey.
Thank you for this video
How is the flavour in comparrison to other rubus fruits is it like thimbleberry or rasberry ?
Sowing for the future it's a lot sweeter very hard to find a sour one
Another difference from a raspberry is that it's very shiny. It doesn't have the fuzzy texture of raspberry. Very smooth. They're about to bloom here in VA shortly, pretty excited.
My Rubus phoenicolacius has definitely spread from rhizomes, I trim them back to keep them off the trail and they spread through the soil for sure.
I see it in the Bronx
Cheers Men !
I was happy when I first saw some years ago. But it is terribly invasive in my area. It has outcompeted the native blackberries and I hardly find them anymore.
I have a whole entire bowl of them
Sounds good where do I get me some?
I sell them on line
I believe this is what's growing here in east tn and i've mistaken it for raspberry's
jey nrother. dp yopu hjapen tp have any more salvia divinorum, ciuyyings?
:)
Not as good as real raspberries. But still quite nice.
Can they kill you if you eat them
Thank you
I wouldnt of thought so, maybe get a sour one now and again but mines not fruits yet so dont know for sure.
Fruited
Only if you eat the branch along with it
When you're so bored of the thing you gave your life to.
:-O