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Blackcurrants in a dryish area ?

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  • Blackcurrants in a dryish area ?

    Have a sort of strip of ground about 2mtr long, it is however a bit sheltered from rain, also a bit sheltered from where I can get at it to water easily.

    Any idea how well a few blackcurrant bushes would get on?

    Ground is fairly good, not heavy, possibly a bit too well draining. Suppose if it retained moisture more then I would be asking.

  • #2
    I have blackcurrants in a very dry stoney bed and they seem to do fine. The soil is not what you could call good and when I say stoney I mean so bad that it is difficult to dig.

    Bumper crop this year, so much that I have given loads away.
    Gardening requires a lot of water - most of it in the form of perspiration. Lou Erickson, critic and poet

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    • #3
      I have 2 big blackcurrant bushes - one is in the open in the middle of a field and the other is in a dry area under a big tree whose roots take most of the moisture. Strangely we get tastier fruit from this bush than the other one, we don't get as much fruit but it is made up for by the flavour.
      A garden is a lovesome thing, God wot! (Thomas Edward Brown)

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      • #4
        For whatever reason I had the impression that they were a bit more tolerant. Just the position sort of lends itself to something like blackcurrants, if they do not mind the slight dryness.

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        • #5
          Mine is growing on a south facing slope in very, very poor clay soil. After the first year of care, it now gets one liquid feed and one mulch of compost per year. Delicious fruit, although not as copious as the one my mother lovingly tends!
          Le Sarramea https://jgsgardening.blogspot.com/

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          • #6
            Mine are right in the center of the garden in full sun the driest bit, soil like solid sandy concrete with stones in, it never gets wet from the rain, they seem to grow fine, I tend to water every day in hot weather to get more shoot growth but they are fine without.

            Its that dry the soil is like a mud brick and cracked around the plants, they seem to cope well

            I had to water very well every day for the first month to get them established as it was so hot and the roots had not grown.
            Living off grid and growing my own food in Bulgaria.....

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            • #7
              I have several blackcurrants next to the fence, planted in very well drained sandy soil. On the other side of that fence is a small forest of sumachs that the neighbours love for some reason. They are evil, aggressive spreading shrubs/trees without any redeeming features that will take over the entire neighbourhood if you let them, but despite the well drained soil and intense root competition the blackcurrants survive and give (possibly slightly reduced) yields of fruit so far.

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              • #8
                Kirk.

                Would you be able to gather the harvest from the bush ?

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by starloc View Post
                  Mine are ... in full sun the driest bit
                  Same here, and I never water them
                  All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Sharpy View Post
                    Kirk.

                    Would you be able to gather the harvest from the bush ?
                    Yes, but not too easily.
                    Plan is for 3 to go in and the first 2 should be reasonable, the 3rd will be a bit of a problem.

                    The small strip of ground is a bit of a problem. Nothing obvious for it, have tried flowers to act as attractors to bees but nothing ever grew. Presently there is a single gooseberry there, which is a bit odd as I didn't buy a gooseberry - think it was a sucker from one somewhere that I dug up and thought Why not give it a go - that will get relocated.

                    It really is one of those bits where the question is What do I do with that???
                    Thought a blackcurrant (well 3) would be a solution.

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