Burpee 'Heritage' Everbearing Red Raspberry
'Heritage' fruits twice — a small June crop and a heavy August-to-frost crop on new canes. The most widely planted home raspberry for 50 years. Plant bare-root canes in early spring.

Rosaceae
Rubus idaeus
Canes that come back year after year, zones 1a through 13b
Ivar Leidus via Wikimedia Commons (cc by_sa_4)
About this plant
Rubus idaeus is a perennial cane plant in the Rosaceae family, the same botanical family as roses, and it earns its beginner-friendly reputation by being one of the most cold-hardy perennials available to American gardeners. Its USDA hardiness range runs from zone 1a all the way to 13b, which means it can overwinter in climates as brutal as interior Alaska and still perform in the warmth of the lower tropics. That kind of range is rare, and it makes Rubus idaeus a genuinely flexible choice no matter where in the country you garden.
The plant grows outdoors as an upright, arching cane perennial. Each individual cane is biennial, it grows one year and produces the following year, but the root system itself is perennial, sending up fresh canes each season. This renewal cycle is the key to understanding how the plant works. Once you grasp that rhythm, the roughly ten minutes of weekly care it asks for starts to make intuitive sense. Genus Rubus is enormous, spanning hundreds of species across the globe, and idaeus sits among its most widely cultivated members.
The gallery

Bloom
Ivar Leidus via Wikimedia Commons (cc by_sa_4)

Gallery
Ivar Leidus via Wikimedia Commons (cc by_sa_4)
How to grow it
Written for beginners. If you've never grown anything before, this is all you need to keep this plant alive and happy.
Find a spot with enough light for its needs. Plant it outdoors, ideally sheltered from the harshest afternoon wind.
Any good all-purpose potting mix or well-drained garden soil will do. Give each plant enough room for its mature spread. Crowding causes more problems than undersizing the bed. Water it in gently once it's settled.
Water when the top inch of soil feels dry, roughly once a week in summer. Soak the soil, then let it breathe before the next round.
This one is very forgiving. A balanced all-purpose fertiliser at the start of the growing season is plenty, and you can skip a month without harm. Plan on 10 minutes a week of hands-on care: watering, a quick trim, checking for pests.
Watch for new growth in spring and summer. If the leaves look tired, trim the oldest ones back to encourage fresh foliage.
Year at a glance
Approximate for a temperate North American zone. Shift earlier the further south you garden, later the further north.
Jan
January: Rest
Dormant
Feb
February: Rest
Dormant
Mar
March: Wake up
New growth
Apr
April: Tend
Routine care
May
May: Tend
Routine care
Jun
June: Tend
Routine care
Jul
July: Tend
Routine care
Aug
August: Tend
Routine care
Sep
September: Tend
Routine care
Oct
October: Tend
Routine care
Nov
November: Wind down
Prep for dormancy
Dec
December: Rest
Dormant
Pet & people safety
We only publish toxicity information when a human has checked it against a primary source. Until that happens, treat this plant as potentially harmful to pets and children: don't let it be eaten or chewed, and consult the ASPCA or your vet if anyone does. You can also search the ASPCA's public toxic-plant database below.
Bloomwise is not a substitute for veterinary or medical advice. Every line above comes from a hand-verified reference.
Recommended supplies
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Frequently asked
Sources
Plant facts on this page come from a blend of public-domain and open-licensed datasets: Biodiversity Heritage Library (historical botanical illustrations, public domain), USDA PLANTS (taxonomy, public domain), GBIF (occurrence and taxonomy, CC-BY 4.0), OpenFarm (crop guides, CC-BY-SA 3.0), and Open-Meteo (climate and hardiness lookup, CC-BY 4.0). Toxicity records come from the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center and the Pet Poison Helpline; every row is hand-verified against a primary reference.