asakiyume: (shaft of light)
asakiyume ([personal profile] asakiyume) wrote2023-07-05 12:03 am

mulberries

The two berries I used to pick and eat as a kid were mulberries and black raspberries (a different fruit from blackberries--we had no blackberries where I grew up but plenty of black raspberries). Black raspberries grow on prickly canes, and you can find them in abandoned lots and beside railroad tracks. I was a pro at finding places to pick them.

Mulberries grow on trees. When I was a kid, there was a copse of three or so sapling-sized mulberry trees on my street, at the edge of someone's property, and we used to walk by them and pick the berries off. Not as flavorful as black raspberries, but pleasantly sweet.

Now all but one of those mulberry trees is gone, but that one tree! It's huge. The berries are waaaay up high, out of reach, but I saw a mourning dove enjoying them. And they fall from those high, high branches down to the street.

grand mulberry tree

big mulberry tree

mulberries

mulberries in hand

These berries, though, come from a different tree, across the way. You can see below that the berries on this tree are more in reach ;-) (I don't recall this tree from when I was a kid--I think we just preferred being on the other side of the street for our collecting.)

the tree across the way

mulberries
squirrelitude: (Default)

[personal profile] squirrelitude 2023-07-06 02:30 am (UTC)(link)
Interesting, I had heard of it as a southern thing, but mulberries do just fine up here as well. :-)

and oh my gosh, that story
smokingboot: (Default)

[personal profile] smokingboot 2023-07-06 08:09 am (UTC)(link)
Here's to that!
wayfaringwordhack: (Default)

[personal profile] wayfaringwordhack 2023-07-06 02:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Except she never will. She considers it weird and uncouth. ;)
wayfaringwordhack: (Default)

[personal profile] wayfaringwordhack 2023-07-06 02:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Exactement ! :P
wayfaringwordhack: (Default)

[personal profile] wayfaringwordhack 2023-07-06 03:00 pm (UTC)(link)
The kids and I were just out gorging ourselves on gooseberries, with a few black currants and tayberries thrown in for good measure. We have red and white currants, too. I planted a mulberry tree here that gave its first fruit this year (well, two at the same time, but the one in the field is behind because it is a poor abandoned baby. :P). I also dug up a mulberry sapling in our yard in Lebanon and brought it here. Had to give it a good whack to make it fit in my suitcase, but it is taking off!
noachoc: (Default)

[personal profile] noachoc 2023-07-07 06:11 pm (UTC)(link)
When I bought the house, one of the things I wanted was a mulberry tree. I finally bought one. It's only three feet tall (and I got exactly one mulberry off of it last summer) but someday I hope it's huge.
wayfaringwordhack: (Default)

[personal profile] wayfaringwordhack 2023-07-07 08:57 pm (UTC)(link)
The expression in French that applies here is: Ni vu, ni connu (not seen, not known).

They asked no questions, so I told no lies. ;)

Bwhahaha. You are a spicy rebel!

athenais: (Default)

[personal profile] athenais 2023-07-09 08:02 pm (UTC)(link)
I've never eaten a mulberry. They're not at all common here. I don't think the coastal region is good for them, although I'm sure someone, somewhere has grown them in their garden in the warmer parts.
athenais: (Default)

[personal profile] athenais 2023-07-11 05:37 am (UTC)(link)
I'm a ten minute drive from the coast and ten miles south of San Francisco. It's very cool and foggy here in the summers. I suspect they need more seasonal temperature fluctuation than we get.
orange_scissors: (Default)

[personal profile] orange_scissors 2023-08-14 07:01 am (UTC)(link)
They are easy to root - just cut off a small, thin branch and stick in soil. I have some that I rooted about 4 months ago and they are about 1 meter tall. They'll produce berries in a few months. In Laos, would be in Feb. but not sure about growing in the US.
orange_scissors: (Default)

[personal profile] orange_scissors 2023-08-14 11:33 am (UTC)(link)
I can't figure out how to include a photo in a reply - so I'll add a photo of the mulberry sapling on to LJ.
orange_scissors: (Default)

[personal profile] orange_scissors 2023-08-14 11:50 am (UTC)(link)
I just posted a photo of one of my saplings... and ended up writing about the work I had done with some weavers on starting to help them with re-starting their silk thread production.

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