| 0 | PI 618309 | 'Dinkum' | Rubus idaeus L. subsp. idaeus | Victoria, Australia | COR |  | Not Available | 2000 | DEVELOPED | 1985 | | | | | Cultivar | Dinkum. Originated in Toolangi, Australia, by G. McGregor, Institute for Horticultural Development, Melbourne, Victoria. Autumn Bliss x Glen Moy; cross made in 1983 by D.L. Jennings, Scottish Crop Research Institute; selected by G. McGregor in 1985; tested as A-83-31-G5; introduced in 1992. Propagated under an agreement with the Australian Rubus Growers Association. Fruit: medium size; firm with medium size drupelets; medium dark red and slightly more glossy than Autumn Bliss; excellent flavor; easy to harvest; main production on primocanes; over-wintered floricanes produce early summer fruit on lower portions; some reistance to postharvest Botrytis rot; ripens as much as 19 days earlier than Heritage and at the same time or 3 days earlier than Autumn Bliss; fresh market use. Plant: yield similar to Autumn Bliss but usually has more condensed ripening season and higher yield at each harvest; upright primocanes with relatively short fruiting laterals. Susceptible to root rot and to infection by pollen transmission of raspberry bushy dwarf virus.
| 1599285 | PI 618309 |
| 1 | PI 618310 | 'Balder' | Rubus idaeus L. subsp. idaeus | Akershus, Norway | COR |  | Not Available | 2000 | DEVELOPED | 1980 | | | | | Cultivar | Balder. Originated in Aas-NLH, Norway, by G. Redalen, Agricultural University of Norway. Norna x Malling Jewel; cross made in 1975; selected in 1980; tested as H4-10-07; introduce in 1988. Fruit: medium size; dark, dull red color; relatively soft; medium sweet; high acidity, separates readily from the receptacle; early, relatively concentrated season; processing use. Plant: productive; primocanes numerous, erect, and vigorous, with dark-purple spines largely restricted to the basal portions, slightly waxy and glabrous; floricanes erect and vigorous, light brownish gray; large leaves may hide fruit, making hand harvest difficult; very winter hardy; susceptible to cane spot.
| 1599286 | PI 618310 |
| 2 | PI 618313 | 'Glen Magna' | Rubus idaeus L. subsp. idaeus | Scotland, United Kingdom | COR |  | Not Available | 2000 | DEVELOPED | 1994 | | | | | Cultivar | Glen Magna. A very high-yielding, late ripening raspberry. Originated in Invergowrie, Scotland, by R.J. McNicol and D.L. Jennings, Scottish Crop Research Institute. Meeker x SCRI 7719B11; cross made in 1980; tested as SCRI 8032A3; introduced in 1994. Worldwide marketing rights held by NSA Plants, East Malling, Kent, U.K. Fruit: very large; deep red color; long conic shape; medium firm; excellent uniform appearance; removal from receptacle may not be sufficiently easy in some environments for machine harvest; excellent flavor with similarities to Meeker and Glen Moy; fresh market and processing, especially freezing. Plant: upright, vigorous canes with few spines. Gene A1gives resistance to two strains of the European aphid vector of the raspberry mosaic virus complex; gene Bu gives resistance to raspberry bushy dwarf virus.
| 1599289 | PI 618313 |
| 3 | PI 618314 | 'Glen Rosa' | Rubus idaeus L. subsp. idaeus | Scotland, United Kingdom | COR |  | Not Available | 2000 | DEVELOPED | 1994 | | | | | Cultivar | Glen Rosa. A raspberry with easily harvested fruit, well adapted to the cool growing conditions of Scotland. Originated in Invergowrie, Scotland, by R.J. McNicol and D.L. Jennings, Scottish Crop Research Institute. Sibling of Glen Ample; complex parentage includes Glen Prosen and Meeker; cross made in 1978; tested as SCRI 7815Al2; introduced in 1994. Worldwide marketing rights held by NSA Plants, East Mailing, Kent, U.K. Fruit: medium size; bright medium-red color; firm with good collar adhesion; easily removed from receptacle; adapted to machine harvest; midseason ripening; fairly good flavor; for processing, less well adapted to fresh market. Plant: production moderate; spine-free, relatively upright canes with medium vigor. Gene H gives resistance to spur blight and cane Botrytis; gene Al0 gives resistance to the four known strains of the European aphid vector of the raspberry mosaic virus complex; gene Bu gives resistance to raspberry bushy dwarf virus.
| 1599290 | PI 618314 |
| 4 | PI 618315 | 'Glen Shee' | Rubus idaeus L. subsp. idaeus | Scotland, United Kingdom | COR |  | Not Available | 2000 | DEVELOPED | 1994 | | | | | Cultivar | Glen Shee. A large-fruited raspberry probably best suited to home gardens and pick-your-own in Britain. Originated in Invergowrie, Scotland, by R.J. McNicol and D.L. Jennings, , Scottish Crop Research Institute. Complex parentage with no named cultivar in its pedigree for four generations; cross made in 1980; tested as SCRI 8044C9; introduced in 1994. Worldwide marketing rights held by NSA Plants, East Malling, Kent, U.K. Fruit: slightly pale; firm; fleshy; slightly weak skin prone to wind rub; not adapted to machine harvest; moderate flavor. Plant: moderate yield; spine-free; canes relatively upright, strong, vigorous. Susceptible to midge blight; gene Al gives resistance to two strains of the European aphid vector of the raspberry mosaic virus complex; susceptible to infection by pollen transmission of raspberry bushy dwarf virus.
| 1599291 | PI 618315 |
| 5 | PI 664330 | 'Klonmore' | Fragaria ×ananassa Duchesne ex Rozier | Louisiana, United States | COR |  | Not Available | 1996 | DEVELOPED | 1940 | | | | | Cultivar | Klonmore.-Orig. in Baton Rouge, La., by Julian C. Miller, Louisiana Agr. Expt. Sta. Introd. in 1940. Blakemore x Klondike; cross made in 1933; selected in 1935. Fruit: small; blunt conic; skin a light bright red, achenes yellow; flesh medium firm, subacid; matures over a long season; ships well; freezes well; dessert quality fair to medium; resembles Blakemore. Plant: vigorous; produces runners freely; resistant to leaf spot; susceptible to leaf scorch. Apparently now superseded by other varieties (e.g., Headliner and Dabreak). Klonmore was bred by P.L.Hawthorne and J.C. Miller of the Louisiana State University, was introduced in 1940. It is highly resistant to leaf spots, and its berries are medium firm, attractive bright red. Limitations: its small size and susceptibility to leaf scorch. It has been mostly replaced by the larger and more productive Haedliner and Dabreak. G. Darrow. 1966. The Strawberry. p. 157. | 1535656 | PI 664330 |