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Organic Raspberry Marastar- Rubus idaeus

Rubus idaeus Marastar
Raspberry, Red Raspberry, European Raspberry

5,0/5
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Hello, I received the plants in Belgium 5 days after ordering, packaging was fine, however the few leaves that remained were 80% yellow. I filmed the box opening and planted the raspberry plants hoping they won't die during the winter.

fifiriri, 30/10/2024

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This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty

More information

Value-for-money
A perpetual variety of raspberry, producing large, very tasty fruits that are conical in shape and dark red in colour. It is a vigorous plant that has good disease tolerance. It fruits on the current year's shoots, from July to October. It can produce up to 3kg per plant over the season. It is a plant from Organic Agriculture.
Flavour
Sugary
Height at maturity
1.20 m
Spread at maturity
1 m
Exposure
Sun, Partial shade
Self-fertilising
Best planting time March, October
Recommended planting time February to April, October to December
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Flowering time May to September
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Harvest time July to October
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Description

Rubus idaeus 'Marastar', from Organic Agriculture, is an excellent perpetual variety. This highly productive raspberry bears delicious red fruits that can be harvested from July to October. Its fruit is conical, of a good size and firmness, sweet and aromatic, with an appetising bright red colour. It is a stout plant that is particularly vigorous and sucker-producing. This hardy variety is quite resistant to diseases, making it perfect for amateur gardeners. Each plant will produce up to 3kg of fruit per year, or even more. It can also be grown in containers.

 

'Marastar' belongs to the Rosaceae family, and is a cousin of blackberries and wild roses. The wild raspberry is native to Europe and temperate Asia, where it grows in cool climates, often in the company of elderberry, beech, or mountain ash in wooded mountain areas. It also grows on plains. 'Marastar' is a cultivar from the nurseryman Marionnet, who is none other than the 'father' of the famous and delicious 'Mara des Bois' strawberry.

'Marastar' is a stout bush with upright stems, forming a bush about 1.1 to 1.3m (4ft) in all directions over time. The stems are biennial, each one dying after fruiting. It spreads from a perennial, sucker-producing stump, which produces new stems armed with small prickles every year. This deciduous bush loses its leaves in autumn. Its leaves are green on top, and white-green and tomentose on the underside. The flowering is honey-rich and popular with bees. The white flowers are small (1 to 2cm (1in) in diameter), grouped in clusters of 10 to 12. They appear continuously from April-May until early September. The fruits are made up of small agglutinated drupes that do not adhere to the receptacle*. They detach very easily when ripe. The fruiting is continuous, from July to October. The fruits should be eaten fresh or processed quickly (into jam, for example), as they do not keep very long. Production reaches its normal level in the third year after planting. A plant can produce fruit for around 10 years.

 

'Marastar' can be planted with other small fruit bushes such as currants or blackcurrants. The fruits can be used to make jams or to garnish pies. Raspberry cultivation seems to date back to the end of the Middle Ages. Raspberries contain levulose and fructose. They contain very little sucrose. The fruits contain ellagic acid, tannins, vitamin C, and are a good source of potassium. It is also a medicinal plant, with its young shoots and buds used in gemmotherapy.

*This non-adherence is also a distinguishing criterion between raspberries in the broad sense and blackberries (including Rubus fruticosus, the European blackberry), where the receptacle remains on the fruit.

 

Plant habit

Height at maturity 1.20 m
Spread at maturity 1 m
Growth rate normal

Fruit

Fruit colour red
Fruit diameter 2 cm
Flavour Sugary
Use Table, Jam, Patisserie
Harvest time July to October

Flowering

Flower colour white
Flowering time May to September
Flower size 1 cm
Bee-friendly Attracts pollinators

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour medium green

Botanical data

Genus

Rubus

Species

idaeus

Cultivar

Marastar

Family

Rosaceae

Other common names

Raspberry, Red Raspberry, European Raspberry

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Product reference7810591

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Planting and care

It prefers humus-rich soil that retains moisture, even in summer, without too much limestone. It appreciates partially shaded but bright exposures. In cool regions, it will tolerate sunlight well. In warmer and sunnier regions, it prefers partial shade. Plant it from November to March in ordinary soil enriched with compost and well-rotted manure.

Water regularly to encourage root development in the first year of planting. During periods of high heat or prolonged drought, provide additional water. 

It can be susceptible to diseases if growing conditions are not optimal (raspberry anthracnose, raspberry rust, powdery mildew, grey mould during rainy periods, or Botrytis). The damage observed in cultivation is due to unfavourable weather conditions, especially during cold springs that allow micro-fungi present in the soil to infest the vegetation. To protect the bushes, it is recommended to fertilise them with organic fertilisers that encourage anaerobic bacteria to multiply in the soil, which strengthens the soil's ability to stimulate the plants' immune system. Raspberry bushes can also be attacked by parasites, such as raspberry worms, the larvae of a small beetle that lodges in the fruits, without causing significant damage.

Planting period

Best planting time March, October
Recommended planting time February to April, October to December

Intended location

Suitable for Woodland edge, Undergrowth
Type of use Vegetable garden
Hardiness Hardy down to -34°C (USDA zone 4) Show map
Ease of cultivation Beginner
Planting density 3 per m2
Exposure Sun, Partial shade
Soil pH Acidic, Neutral
Soil type Clayey (heavy), Silty-loamy (rich and light), Fertile, humus-bearing, deep.

Care

Pruning instructions Only trim the stems located in the centre of the plant to provide it with light. Remove dead wood. Remove the stems that have already borne fruit.
Pruning Pruning recommended once a year
Pruning time February
Soil moisture Tolerant
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
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