elder berrys or lack off

The Homebrew Forum

Help Support The Homebrew Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

mosh

Active Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2010
Messages
48
Reaction score
0
Location
hebden bridge
this years crop of elder is pretty sparce sum bushes with empty stalks even before ripening anyone got any idea why this is happening if it carries on there wont be any for making wine with
 
State of the mind said:
I hope not. Was hoping to make a Elderflower wine this year.
I think you may have left that one just a little too late.

No shortage of berries that I've seen around our part of the world, although there are none ready for picking just yet.
 
theres a fair few around here (West Sussex), just turning black so should be harvesting within the next few weeks.

if you pay the postage ill send ya some!
 
strange i'll post some picks we have hundreds of bushes they just don't seem to have many on
not good
 
mosh said:
strange i'll post some picks we have hundreds of bushes they just don't seem to have many on
not good

I think the prolonged cold weather at the beginning of the year has affected crops, sloes are sparse in these parts too, although I know where there are enough to make may usual gallon of sloe gin.

UP
 
Could be the local weather at any stage. If its any consolation the elderberries are green here and two forays have only reaped 8 ozs of blackberries. :(
 
I noticed this lack of berries today whilst walking the dog, I reckon several tress had only a 50% berry covering to what I would expect.
 
We had no sloes last year, but are in abundance and ripe on our alotment. Blackberries are in fruit too, many ripe but more underripe.
 
I planned on absolutely pillaging the local bushes and such for berries this year. You guys have got me worried that I might have left it a little late.

Although I have just been and picked a whole load of plums which were ripe today and, taking inspiration from this site, used grape juice in place of some of the water for Plum Wine. I reckon it'll be marvellous!
 
Bit of a sore subject elderberries for me.
There is a huge elderberry bush that is in my neighbours garden that backs on to my rear garden, along with some spindly hawthorne hedge that is far too high as well. I've spoken a few times to neighbour about it (very politely and reasonably), but he either doesn't have time to / can't be arsed to or is just being difficult about it.
Pinches a lot of my light, extends on to my side quite a lot blah blah....have problems with veg bolting in certain parts etc etc.......does my head in.

Also, the birds eat all the berries and then park themselves on my TV aerial.....then proceed to **** red crap all over my path/me/swmbo/the dogs.

Grrrrrr :rofl:


Might have to at least get some wine out of it this year :grin:
 
Alec said:
I noticed this lack of berries today whilst walking the dog, I reckon several tress had only a 50% berry covering to what I would expect.

Get yourself up to Wepre park Alec, there were lots of elderflowers in the spring
 
Well doods there are masses and masses of berries here elders balck and more sloes than you could fill your car with on private picking grounds. If anyone would care to join me after the first frost for the sloes you would be more than welcome :thumb:
 
mosh said:
this years crop of elder is pretty sparce sum bushes with empty stalks even before ripening anyone got any idea why this is happening if it carries on there wont be any for making wine with

Yes, trees are a little thin around here too .. but I've put it down to the goodies being plundered whilst in flower .... can't make elderflower wine and then go back to the same tree expecting to see berries! :D
 
Our crop of berrys are down this year but we have had some realy bad N/E winds up here which might be the cause, some bushes have just stalks, Dave NE
 
We've been out on the boat for a couple of weeks, just chugging the canals, Kiddy to Chester and back, but in 6 years of ditch crawling I've never seen such an abundance of stone fruits. Yellow plums weren't quite ready so we may have to go out for a bimble this coming weekend, but there is going to be a glut of damsons and sloes.

Unfortunately for most of you, the richest pickings are on the wrong side of the canals and only accessible by boat, but there's still plenty to be had along the towpaths.

So far this year I have only picked blackberries from 2 locations, and only for a few minutes each time, collecting 5.5lbs. One of those locations was open to any towpath walker, the other was a case of “stop engine, back up a bit and get the stern into that bank”. That can occasionally be amusing if another boat comes around a bend and slows to ask if we've run aground or need to throw them a rope - “No thanks, no problem, just picking blackberries”.

If working a flight of locks I frequently cycle ahead to the next, and may then have to wait a little while if another boat is approaching from the opposite direction and the lock is set in their favour. So there I was on another occasion, sat on a lock gate on the Stratford flight, waited for a ‘downhill’ boat to enter the lock, close the top gate behind them and start to draw the bottom paddles, and the bloke off that boat looks down the canal and spots an ‘uphill’ boat (ours) almost diagonally blocking the canal, pointy end towards the towpath, blunt end stuck in the bushes. Not realising it was my boat, or that I'd previously signalled back “boat coming down, just float around for a while” this other bloke says to me “What IS that woman playing at?”
I says to him “That's my wife and she's just picking plums while she's waiting for you to quit fannying around and get down this lock”. Sure enough, by the time he'd opened the bottom gates she was out of the bushes and lined up perfectly to take our turn.
 
Having never been on the canals... none of that made sense to me Moley. But ... for some odd reason, it has made me want to give it a go .. or maybe it's the possibility of sailing (?) - barging (?) - whatever to all those good pubs!

It may be (however) the fact that I've spent the last few hours in wetherspoons with a few outstanding ten fifty beers http://www.grainstorebrewery.com/product-beers.asp - if you see this beer, buy it!
 
Plum like things - if a tree has part fallen will they still ripen enough to use?

Moley....... glad you enjoyed.

Markp ..........why not ask him if you can harvest his berries and offer him a bottle of the wine and prune it for him (for yourself) at the same time

bandit .....Sloes we got, I'm going to have some when they are ripe and put them in the freezer instead of waiting for frost.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top