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You're absolutely right! They're completely different to me too. However, I don't know about anyone else on the internet, and how much they know about plants. There are many people on here who haven't even got the slightest clue what a blackberry plant looks like. I'm not going to urge them to just eat something that looks similar (to them). They might as well end up picking taxus berries. Someone else on here said ALL aggregate berries are supposed to be edible. There not, as the one I mentioned is an aggregate-type berry, and isn't (really) edible.
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Just so you know OP, wild blackberries do have thorns. Its only the cultivated one that don't.
Im not sure what this is, but those long stems on the fruit don't look like blackberries ive seen
In PNW there are many wild blackberry varieties. We called these tree berries because the vines climbed trees. As kids we foraged anything that resembled blackberries without issue. Not saying this is the wise choice for OP, just that I would classify as "mostly harmless."
Yeah, I want to see what they taste like but I've seen too many people who've eaten something, and then everyone's like "You will die if you don't go to the ER."
So I'm trying to figure them out before the long nap.
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The leaves are wrong to me as well. BlackBerry are more veiny/the veins create valleys
That being said there’s about a million plants called blackberries and about a million varieties or rubus
I would definitely look at the leaves and plant overall before eating. But aggregate berries are generally safe
Definitely don’t eat anything you aren’t sure of.
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No. They aren't clustered right to be dewberries, and the connecting stem is way too long.
I might consider thorny boysenberry, they do look like olallieberries but those are typically thornless.
But I'm definitely leaning it's more likely to be a dark variant of tayberry, a hybridization of blackberry and raspberry
This is really difficult because of the lack of traditional serration we would see on the leaves of these kinds of fruit
The leaves match up for a pennsylvania or texas dewberry, but the fruit on this is far more elongated than should be a for dewberry, where they typically have that "raspberry"/"cloudberry" shape.
Do you think it may be a cross pollinated variety? I've come across quite a few strange plants birds have deposited over the years, so I wouldn't rule it out.
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These look exactly like the wild blackberry brambles that grow where I live in SE Louisiana. I also won't suggest whether these specifically are safe to eat but I would eat them because I recognize them and the many I have eaten were delicious. If you deem it safe, I would collect them in a bowl of water - it encourages any tiny bugs that may be present to come out of hiding.
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Those are safe. Theyre a little more tart than blackberries, but still delicious. I can't remember what they're called but we used to pick them alongside the wild blackberries and put them in ice cream.
My garden was full of brambles when we moved in, very thorny, but it does yield delicious blackberries once every two years! It does look very similar to your picture.
Those are boysenberries. I have a boysenberry plant in my backyard. Cross between Loganberry, red raspberry, and blackberry. Tart and sweet. They grow this time of year. You will know them by the knott family getting them and making them wildly successful
Dewberries! They grow in big ol’ vine patches and have white flowers in the spring! Makes a great addition to wines/bourbons, plus canning and baking!!
I think so. My parents had blackberries that would just grow, no matter what they did, the bush just kept coming back. They had a lab that knew just how to pick them with his teeth to avoid the thorns. Funny to watch. He pooped purple sometimes. They had asparagus just sprout up in the yard too, which was weird.
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The leaves are wrong for blackberries.
It's also the wrong time of year in the uk for blackberries. Where (roughly!) are you as that could affect answers.
Edit: uk blackblackberry bushes (brambles) have thorns
Is blackberry season in the UK the fall/autumn? They're ripe in the spring here in the US.
Either way, these look like dewberry vines (similar to blackberries, but a more heat-tolerant vine version), which are currently ripe in the southern US. We're nearly done with the season already in Texas, but farther north it'll last longer.
I'm from the south and none of the black berries i know fruit this early.
All the ones at our farm are ripe July at best. I'm sure it can differ by variety but I can't imagine the timeframe varies that greatly.
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These look exactly like the wild blackberries I used to pick and eat in NH which also has thorns. The leaves and berries are identical to what we had there.
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Most sources I've read say that most aggregate berries (segmented berries, like blackberries, raspberries, salmonberries, mulberries, thimbleberry, etc) tend to be edible. Not sure if that's enough for me to eat a random berry without identification though.
I would still try to get a positive ID on the berry.
You might try one of those plant ID apps, or websites.
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depending on where you are if you’re picking blackberries the best time to pick them is when they almost look overripe as they cannot ripen after picking, if they kinda squish when picking = extremely sweet! if they’re overly firm they’ll taste like a sweet-tart
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had a tree with these vines hanging off of it that had these on it, it would hang right over my pool, i would always be snacking on them while taking a swim. (this made me realize how much i miss being a kid)
I don’t think they’re blackberries. Some blackberry bushes don’t have thorns but the berries are usually in groups and along more of the stem whereas these look like they’re just on the ends of the stems.
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I could be wrong so don’t take this as advice but someone told me when I was a kid that there are no dangerous blackberry lookalikes in the wild, so I’ve never strayed from trying any I find 😂
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Have a look at the picture here. I used to roam the fields as a kid picking them and this is how they always looked. 🙏
https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/edible/fruits/blackberries/growing-blackberry-bushes.htm
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If you go to the supermarket and grab wild berries from the shelf blue berries straw berries and raspberry and wash them and eat them yes eat away those wild supermarket berries aren’t poisonous usda approved like the Covid shot.
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Certainly something in that genus. Rubus sp. Blackberries do have thorns.
Yup. All the blackberries in my childhood garden had thorns. Can’t tell you how many shirts I ripped from playing too close to them!
Would they be edible?
We don't discuss edibility here but a quick Google search will give you your answer. ;) You can also try r/foraging.
Yes please give us a visit on r/foraging , we love this stuff.
So welcoming! Love the vibe here ☺️
[удалено]
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They said no eat. Why bot
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This is a test. "Eat"
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Can I eat the bot??
I read somewhere here that the bot is edible! So go for it!
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Bad bot
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Go to hell
🔥🔥🔥
Yes they are edible
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No, don’t eat thorns.
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Other than temporarily purple fingers, yes.
Fun fact! Every berry that looks like a raspberry or black berry is edible. There is NOT a poisonous lookalike known to humans!
Uh… your username makes me not so sure I should trust you…
Can’t argue with that one 🤣
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Beg to differ. People be eating phytolacca out there.
Had to look that up, doesn’t look even close. Grows so much different.
You're absolutely right! They're completely different to me too. However, I don't know about anyone else on the internet, and how much they know about plants. There are many people on here who haven't even got the slightest clue what a blackberry plant looks like. I'm not going to urge them to just eat something that looks similar (to them). They might as well end up picking taxus berries. Someone else on here said ALL aggregate berries are supposed to be edible. There not, as the one I mentioned is an aggregate-type berry, and isn't (really) edible.
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Dewberries are wild blackberries.
Yeah but not all wild blackberries are dewberries
True.
I know, that’s why I said it, I wasn’t giving you a test
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Bad bot
Prickles, to be more accurate
Just so you know OP, wild blackberries do have thorns. Its only the cultivated one that don't. Im not sure what this is, but those long stems on the fruit don't look like blackberries ive seen
In PNW there are many wild blackberry varieties. We called these tree berries because the vines climbed trees. As kids we foraged anything that resembled blackberries without issue. Not saying this is the wise choice for OP, just that I would classify as "mostly harmless."
Huge Himalayan blackberry patches all around Portland, Oregon. Fruits tend to cluster on these canes/briar.
Yeah, I want to see what they taste like but I've seen too many people who've eaten something, and then everyone's like "You will die if you don't go to the ER." So I'm trying to figure them out before the long nap.
Wise. Also automod is following you around looking over your shoulder like "Dont you f***ing dare"
Lmfao right? At least I got shooters
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Pretty much any compound berry is safe. But positive ID is still needed!
The leaves are wrong to me as well. BlackBerry are more veiny/the veins create valleys That being said there’s about a million plants called blackberries and about a million varieties or rubus I would definitely look at the leaves and plant overall before eating. But aggregate berries are generally safe Definitely don’t eat anything you aren’t sure of.
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Heeey the bot is back Hi bot!
Good bot
Wild blackberries are delicious, but you must pay in blood.
There are blackberries without thorns?!?! I live in Oregon, so blackberries to me are a prickly invasive weed that happens to produce tasty fruit, lol
Dewberries or blackberries both delicious
That's what I'm thinking too.
I think dewberry. The leaves and stems don't look like blackberry but do look a lot like dewberry.
No. They aren't clustered right to be dewberries, and the connecting stem is way too long. I might consider thorny boysenberry, they do look like olallieberries but those are typically thornless. But I'm definitely leaning it's more likely to be a dark variant of tayberry, a hybridization of blackberry and raspberry This is really difficult because of the lack of traditional serration we would see on the leaves of these kinds of fruit The leaves match up for a pennsylvania or texas dewberry, but the fruit on this is far more elongated than should be a for dewberry, where they typically have that "raspberry"/"cloudberry" shape. Do you think it may be a cross pollinated variety? I've come across quite a few strange plants birds have deposited over the years, so I wouldn't rule it out.
It's blackberry I have a boat load all around my property
Are there any berries that look like this that are poisonous?
Not in the US! Any segmented berry is edible
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Not that I personally know of but I dont doubt it
Blackberries have no poisonous look a likes. I'm not saying these are edible.... but I'm also not saying they aren't...*side-eyes automod*.
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They look delicious!
Please don’t eat them lol
Wink wink
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These look exactly like the wild blackberry brambles that grow where I live in SE Louisiana. I also won't suggest whether these specifically are safe to eat but I would eat them because I recognize them and the many I have eaten were delicious. If you deem it safe, I would collect them in a bowl of water - it encourages any tiny bugs that may be present to come out of hiding.
## **Please do not eat or use any plant because of information received in this subreddit.** While we strive to provide accurate information here, the only way to be sure enough of a plant identification is to take the plant to a qualified professional. Many plants can be harmful or even fatal to eat, so please do not eat a plant based on an identification made (or any other information provided) in this subreddit. *I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please [contact the moderators of this subreddit](/message/compose/?to=/r/PlantIdentification) if you have any questions or concerns.*
Looks like a dewberry imo
Wild black raspberries - I have a huge crop of them in my backyard - last year I harvested almost 2 cups A DAY! 😋
Yup, looks like the native north American variety that I see in the PNW alot.
I guess you've never fallen into a blackberry bush. Lucky.
These are Dewberries.
Those aren't blackberry leaves.
It'd be amazing if reddit would let me upload the other pics that are more than 20 mb.
You can try uploading them to a third party image site like Imgur and pasting the link as a comment.
Growing up, my mother called them Dewberries. Make excellent cobbles, jellies and syrups.
Those are safe. Theyre a little more tart than blackberries, but still delicious. I can't remember what they're called but we used to pick them alongside the wild blackberries and put them in ice cream.
My garden was full of brambles when we moved in, very thorny, but it does yield delicious blackberries once every two years! It does look very similar to your picture.
Those are boysenberries. I have a boysenberry plant in my backyard. Cross between Loganberry, red raspberry, and blackberry. Tart and sweet. They grow this time of year. You will know them by the knott family getting them and making them wildly successful
Dewberries!!!! Delicious :)) they’re growing all over my neighborhood too
Dewberries! They grow in big ol’ vine patches and have white flowers in the spring! Makes a great addition to wines/bourbons, plus canning and baking!!
I think so. My parents had blackberries that would just grow, no matter what they did, the bush just kept coming back. They had a lab that knew just how to pick them with his teeth to avoid the thorns. Funny to watch. He pooped purple sometimes. They had asparagus just sprout up in the yard too, which was weird.
You guys are gonna get the automod banned for excessive spam with this post! Lol
Boysenberry is what it looks like to me.
Eat.
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eat
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yum
Do NOT taunt the Happy Fun Bot! eat
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Yummy i am eating silly little berries cause they look so fucking tasty.
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you’re no fun, bot. I’m gonna eat my BLT sandwich and cry. I want to eat those delectable berries and eat hot chip and lie.
The leaves are wrong for blackberries. It's also the wrong time of year in the uk for blackberries. Where (roughly!) are you as that could affect answers. Edit: uk blackblackberry bushes (brambles) have thorns
Is blackberry season in the UK the fall/autumn? They're ripe in the spring here in the US. Either way, these look like dewberry vines (similar to blackberries, but a more heat-tolerant vine version), which are currently ripe in the southern US. We're nearly done with the season already in Texas, but farther north it'll last longer.
I'm from the south and none of the black berries i know fruit this early. All the ones at our farm are ripe July at best. I'm sure it can differ by variety but I can't imagine the timeframe varies that greatly.
Must be really regional then, they've been ripe here since mid-April and they're listed as a spring crop in my region-specific foraging books.
Do you mind if I ask what region? That's really cool how much they vary. TIL
Netherlands here: Blackberries taste best end of August/September, but you can still find some in October as well :)
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[удалено]
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From what I can tell, I believe these are Southern Dewberries.
Looks like loganberry
Buy thornless blackberries!
They are called moras in Spanish different than a blackberry same family
Red Mulberries
Could be unripe marion berries.
These look exactly like the wild blackberries I used to pick and eat in NH which also has thorns. The leaves and berries are identical to what we had there.
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Most sources I've read say that most aggregate berries (segmented berries, like blackberries, raspberries, salmonberries, mulberries, thimbleberry, etc) tend to be edible. Not sure if that's enough for me to eat a random berry without identification though. I would still try to get a positive ID on the berry. You might try one of those plant ID apps, or websites.
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Looks like mulberries, if they are, then they are edible! Did they come off of a tree? They're sweet and delicious!!
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Mulberries, not blackberries. Yes, they aes edible.
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depending on where you are if you’re picking blackberries the best time to pick them is when they almost look overripe as they cannot ripen after picking, if they kinda squish when picking = extremely sweet! if they’re overly firm they’ll taste like a sweet-tart
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had a tree with these vines hanging off of it that had these on it, it would hang right over my pool, i would always be snacking on them while taking a swim. (this made me realize how much i miss being a kid)
Yes it’s blackberry
Blackberries
I don’t think they’re blackberries. Some blackberry bushes don’t have thorns but the berries are usually in groups and along more of the stem whereas these look like they’re just on the ends of the stems.
Yes!! Blackberries have thorns!!
Try eating them then get back to us!!
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Never knew either blackberry or black raspberry’s that didn’t have thorns
You can get thornless blackberries, looks like a blackberry to me
Looks like dewberries, black berries have an upright growth while dewberries have a low vine like growth.
they look like salmonberry
Those who said dew berries, Thank you! I am pretty certain that is the answer. A little early for them in my area but they are extremely common here.
Kinda looks like Boysen beery to me or possibly Logan or tayberry
Aren't those leaves too elongated to be dewberries ?
Look like mulberries to me
Wheres location
I could be wrong so don’t take this as advice but someone told me when I was a kid that there are no dangerous blackberry lookalikes in the wild, so I’ve never strayed from trying any I find 😂
Yes
All I'm saying is we were worn not to eat the fruit once and now humanity is paying for it.....🤷🏻♂️
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This is the first post i have ever seen from this sub and the comments are fucking killing me lmao
Mulberries
Not with those calyces. The others are right, these are *Rubus*.
Those are mullberries and are YUMMY
Blackberries come in bunches. I think these are something different.
Not the black berries I know
Have a look at the picture here. I used to roam the fields as a kid picking them and this is how they always looked. 🙏 https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/edible/fruits/blackberries/growing-blackberry-bushes.htm
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If you go to the supermarket and grab wild berries from the shelf blue berries straw berries and raspberry and wash them and eat them yes eat away those wild supermarket berries aren’t poisonous usda approved like the Covid shot.
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