Credit: Ben Lee / WTML
Where to find bramble
Bramble grows almost anywhere in the UK. It is common in woodland, hedges and scrub, and thrives in acidic soils. Flowers bloom in June to July and the fruit is ripe in July.
Hardy and determined, the bramble uses powerful roots to grow rapidly in almost any environment. Look out for juicy blackberries in the summer to make the most of this countryside favourite.
Common names: bramble, blackberry, European blackberry, black heg, wild blackberry
Scientific name: Rubus fruticosus
Family: Rosaceae
Origin: native
Flowering season: June to September
Habitat: woodland, grassland
Bramble has long, thorny and arching stems and can grow up to two metres or more high.
Leaves: alternate and palmately compound. Each leaf is divided into three or five serrated, short-stalked, oval leaflets. Leaves are dark green on top and pale beneath. Leaf stalks and mid-ribs are prickly.
Flowers: clusters of white or pink flowers appear from late spring to early summer. They are 2–3cm in diameter with five petals and many stamens.
Fruits/seeds: the fruit, known as a blackberry, is 1–2cm in length and ripens from green through red, to deep purple and finally black when ripe in late July.
Not to be confused with: wild raspberry (Rubus idaeus) which also produces fruits made up of many tiny individual fruits or drupelets. They can all be a similar colour at certain times and ripen at similar times of the year. There are some differences to help identification. When a ripe raspberry is picked it is red and there is a hollow within the fruit. When a ripe blackberry is picked it is black and the soft white core remains inside the fruit. Dewberry (Rubus caesius) resembles bramble but tends to have fewer, larger individual fruits. Their fruit surface is waxy rather than shiny and their stems tend to scramble along the ground rather than being tall and arching.
Credit: Ben Lee / WTML
Bramble grows almost anywhere in the UK. It is common in woodland, hedges and scrub, and thrives in acidic soils. Flowers bloom in June to July and the fruit is ripe in July.
Credit: Andrew Parkinson / Alamy Stock Photo
Bramble flowers are a food source for honey bees and bumblebees and other wild animals. Leaves are eaten by certain caterpillars as well as some grazing mammals, especially deer. Ripe berries are eaten and their seeds dispersed by several mammals such as fox and badger, and small birds. Bramble is also a habitat for some animals, including grass snakes.
Have you seen your first butterfly or swallow of spring? Or your first ripening berry or autumn leaf tint? Let us know what's happening to animals and plants near you and help scientists track the effects of climate change on wildlife.
Join Nature's CalendarCredit: Ilene Sterns / WTML
UK folklore dictates that blackberries should not be picked after Old Michaelmas Day in October, as the Devil has sullied them. Brambles used to be planted on graves to stop sheep grazing, but might also have had the more superstitious purpose of keeping the dead in.
Archaeologists have found blackberries in the stomach of a Neolithic man, a testament to their long-standing popularity!
The pastime of blackberry picking (blackberrying) goes back thousands of years and is still popular. Ripe juicy blackberries have high vitamin C content and can be eaten raw or cooked. You can add them to pies, crumbles, wines, jams, jellies and vinegar. Strong ale brewed from blackberries, malt and hops was popular in the 18th and 19th centuries.
It’s been widely been used in traditional medicine for its healing and detoxifying properties and fibres from its stems have even been used to make string.
Blackberry bushes can prevent soil erosion on infertile, disturbed sites and the ancient Britons used thorny stems as a boundary or barrier in the way we use barbed wire.
George Anderson • 12 Aug 2019
Read our simple and easy recipe for this delicious foraged blackberry liqueur, or bramble whisky. You'll love this homemade tipple, it's sure to impress!
Read the recipe