Sea Buckthorn
© Copyright 2010. Do not copy. All rights reserved and enforced.Sea Buckthorn bushes grow anywhere from 6 to 13 feet (2 to 4 metres) high. Some varieties are more trees, some are more shrubs. Some can be grown as hedges. They can be grown from seed, and are cold hardy down to around -40 F / -40 C.
The bushes like full sun and well-drained soil. They will grow in poor soils, but not dry areas. They tolerate sea spray and salinity, so on coastlines they can out-compete many other plants.
Sea Buckthorn bushes have narrow leaves averaging 1 to 3 inches (2 1/2 to 7 1/2 cm) in length. The leaves are silvery, becoming dull green as they get older. A few cultivars are thornless.
Plants are male or female. The gender of the plant is only evident once it has flowered (the male plants have smaller flower buds.) You need a male plant and a female plant for berries to appear on the female bushes.
The small, yellow blossoms appear before the leaves do; male plants rely on the wind to carry the pollen to the female plants.
The bright orange or red Sea Buckthorn berries grow on 2 and 3 year old branches, ripening at the end of August or the start of September. The berries are not easy to pick because the berries are so small, only about 1/5 inch (5 mm) wide, and because they are firmly attached to the branches: they will even cling to the branches the entire winter. There has to date (2006) been no success with mechanical harvesting; it has to be done by hand.
Sea Buckthorn Berries have a very tart taste. They can be used for jams and jellies, or processed into juice or an oil extract. The leaves can be used for tea. The berries are also being used commercially in skin creams and lotions.
The buzz around Sea Blackthorn Berries at the start of the 21st century has centred around their nutritional and medicinal value.
China has large planting programmes for Sea Buckthorn, with two purposes: one is to provide income crops for people, the second is to regenerate deforested areas where attempts to plant other vegetation have failed. The Sea Buckthorn has reduced soil erosion by up to 90% in some areas, and provides shelter and food for wildlife.
Plantings on the Canadian prairies have also been done with an eye to erosion control and wildlife shelter. The berries are not yet thought of in Canada as being a commercial investment, because hand-harvesting depends on cheap labour.
Other entries for: Berries
Açaí Berries, Akala Berries, Aronia Berries, Baba Berries, Barberries, Bilberries, Black Gooseberries, Blackberries, Blueberries, Buffalo Currants, Bumbleberries, Cape Gooseberries, Cloudberries, Cranberries, Currants, Elderberries, Garden Huckleberries, Gooseberries, Haw Flakes, Hawthorne Berries, Huckleberry, Hudson Bay Currants, Jostaberries, Lingonberries, Mulberries, Otaheite Gooseberry, Raspberries, Red Currants, Saskatoon Berries, Sea Buckthorn, Serendipity Berries, Strawberries, Sunberries, Tayberries, Thimbleberries, Ugni, Waimate Berries, White Currants, Wineberries, Wonderberries, Worcesterberries
Other entries for: Soft Fruit
Cherries, Grapes
Other entries for: Fruit
Bananas, Bletting, Candied Fruit, Citrus Fruit, Dried Fruit, Drupes, Hard Fruit, Olives, Rhubarb
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