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FREE: Black Mulberry Seeds

Black Mulberry Seeds
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Description

The listing, Black Mulberry Seeds has ended.

This is for seeds to grow your very own mulberries.

Picking and packing are touchy the only reliable way to enjoy the mulberry's unique, fresh flavour is to grow your own

The mulberry will thrive in most soils providing the drainage is good, with heavy crops even where the ground is poor and infertile. A neutral to slightly acid soil with a pH of between 5.5 and 7 is ideal.
A mulberry tree may be grown in a large container but will eventually outgrow the available root space. When planting, use a soil-based compost and position the tree so that the finished level is 7cm-10cm (3in-4in) below the top of the container. This will allow for an annual 2cm-3cm (1in) layer of fresh compost.
A bare-root tree may be planted in winter, but the roots are brittle so take care when back filling with compost. Use your fist rather than your foot to firm the soil. Container-grown trees may be planted at any time of the year but avoid purchasing plants that are pot bound with a tangled mass of roots.

Fruit ripens over a period of weeks during late August and early September. Birds love mulberries and netting is recommended to ensure that the crop is not eaten before you can harvest it.
The simplest method of harvesting is to spread a cotton, plastic or fine-mesh sheet on the ground and shake the tree every other day. There will be leaves, twigs, debris and the occasional unripe berry mixed in with the ripe fruit. Either pick out the fruit by hand or put everything into a tub of water. The ripe fruit will sink and the debris may be skimmed off the surface.
Questions & Comments
Original
Mulberry fruit is classified in the modern Chinese Materia Medica as a blood tonic, and is listed along with herbs having similar traditional uses such as ho-shou-wu (Polygonum multiflorum, root), cooked rehmannia (Rehmannia glutinosa, root), ligustrum (Ligustrum lucidum, fruit) and lycium (Lycium chinensis, fruit). Traditionally, mulberry fruit has been used as a medicinal agent to nourish the yin and blood, benefit the kidneys, and treat weakness, fatigue, anemia, and premature graying of hair. It is also used utilized to treat urinary incontinence, tinnitus, dizziness, and constipation in the elderly and the anemic.
Jul 7th, 2014 at 2:31:21 AM PDT by
Original
The Romans ate Mulberries at their feasts, as we know from the Satires of Horace, who (Sat. ii,) recommends that Mulberries be gathered before sunset. We also find mention of the Mulberry in Ovid, who in the Metamorphoses refers to the legend of Pyramus and Thisbe, who were slain beneath its shade, the fruit being fabled to have thereby changed from white to deep red through absorbing their blood. By Virgil, the tree is termed sanguinea morus. Pliny speaks of its employment in medicine and also describes its use in Egypt and Cyprus. He further relates:
'Of all the cultivated trees, the Mulberry is the last that buds, which it never does until the cold weather is past, and it is therefore called the wisest of trees. But when it begins to put forth buds, it dispatches the business in one night, and that with so much force, that their breaking forth may be evidently heard.'
Jul 7th, 2014 at 2:32:57 AM PDT by
Original
the mulberry has long been used as a way to "purge forth the worms" or as an anti parasite for certain worms
Jul 7th, 2014 at 2:35:01 AM PDT by
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how quick would you say the seeds would take root after planting and do they need to come inside in winter or would they be ok planted directly outside once sprouted/mature enough.
Jul 9th, 2014 at 7:38:49 PM PDT by
Original
these seeds are very vigorous growers I have two started in spring over 6 foot right now and I am getting them out asap they lived through last winter and we had -30
Jul 9th, 2014 at 8:32:40 PM PDT by
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ok. would one sprout be able to politate another or do they need a different type of malberry to flower and produce fruit or are they bee pollinated?
Jul 10th, 2014 at 4:16:23 PM PDT by
Original
one sprout will turn into a big tree or a trained bush and produce it they do not need cross pollination but with the seeds you will have more then 1 for sure and they are very hardy Im coming to the end of mulberry season here it will wrap up soon but the berries come early and stay for a while. the first crop maybe small but I had one 6 footer from spring taken out today they grow fast but you may need to wait a year for a full crop
Jul 10th, 2014 at 10:03:24 PM PDT by
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how many seeds are included in the auction?
Jul 11th, 2014 at 3:08:48 PM PDT by
Original
one or two berries worth about 15-20 seeds
Jul 11th, 2014 at 8:57:08 PM PDT by
Original
what I mean by lived through last winter is the seeds fell last yr I saw no mulberry in my tea garden in fact I had plumbing issues that required a back hoe to dig up my yard and boom right in the tea garden so where they grew was not a solid place for them to grow last yr but I have chickens and all things being what they are last year seeds had to be "deposited" in the tea garden after the pipe was fixed. Now after a brutal winter I have 2 6 foot mulberry trees in the tea garden right where it was dug up. They are fast to grow and we have many seeds that lived through -30 and are sprouting up seedlings all over my yard. They need a sunny spot water at first and then they can pretty much manage on their own
Jul 12th, 2014 at 6:11:10 AM PDT by

Black Mulberry Seeds is in the Home & Garden | Gardening | Gardening Seeds & Bulbs category