Can you describe the taste? We have (in Finland) native raspberries and then Arctic bramble (I remember there were flowers were I grew up in Lapland but never berries), and cloudberries. The pale yellow delicate little one growing on marshes. The cloudberry rush was a yearly event...
They taste very similar to raspberries, I think a bit more mild but with just a teeny bit of tartness. I missed out on foraging for them a few years, so am having trouble rememberinf exactly. (And I think the first two I tried were not ripe enough because they were a little bitter.)
There is another native bramble plant called thimbleberries that puts out flowers and berries shortly after the salmonberries. (That’s the one in the pic I’ve attached.) They also taste very similar to raspberries, and their skin is soft but not smooth. They are wide enough that you can stick them on the ends of your fingers (which is always fun, no matter how many times I do it), but they are so delicate that there seems to be no way to gather them without crushing them. I have one I’m trying to grow from a cutting because unlike other bramble plants, their thorns are so tiny that they just feel coarsely fuzzy - so I won’t have to risk poking myself on them while arranging plants on my balcony.
I am obsessed with cloudberries! I used to see what turned out to be creeping raspberry, which looks very similar to photos of cloudberries I’ve seen. Creeping raspberries are very bland, though, so have only seen them used as groundcover for landscaping.
I am obsessed with cloudberries! I used to see what turned out to be creeping raspberry, which looks very similar to photos of cloudberries I’ve seen. Creeping raspberries are very bland, though, so have only seen them used as groundcover for landscaping.
I spent a few years trying to get ahold of cloudberry plants to try and experiment with temperature control techniques to see if I could get them to grow. Alas, I could only get seeds and haven’t been able to plant them yet. So when I am set up for them, if any of the seeds are successful it’ll take 8 years before they mature enough to see if the plants are male or female.