9 responses

  1. Thomas
    March 24, 2012

    The proper term would just be “cross,” not “cross section,” since “cross section” just refers to the shape or surface made by cutting something perpendicularly. 🙂

    Reply

    • George Monroe
      May 1, 2015

      Odds are that the person who wrote this article never grew a blackberry in her/his life. I would bet they are a writer/researcher
      writing for a living.

      Reply

  2. curtis
    June 29, 2016

    We been growing both and somehow they crossed with our wild blackberries and now we have part of our propperty with huge blackberry and boisonberry crosses! These cross bread berries are not like a pinecone shape or tapered they are the same size from top to bottom and about the size of my thumb. I had no idea that they did that but now i have an acher or so of them. I now pick them a couple times a year and have more than i can handle.

    Reply

    • Donda
      October 26, 2016

      Curtis,
      Feel free to send some my way!
      Where do you live?
      I’d buy some from you… they sound yummy! If you’re close enough, we’d even pick them ourselves! Lol

      You’re very fortunate!

      Reply

  3. Greg
    September 18, 2017

    You have it backwards in the 6th paragraph. The thick boysenberry vines grow upright, the much thinner blackberry vines hug the ground.

    Reply

  4. Shon
    November 3, 2018

    Boysen berries are more sour than the sweeter black berries.

    Reply

  5. Ellen
    July 23, 2021

    I bought what said “Boysenberry thornless vines.Delicious, large berries. Third year and much more fruit this year.

    Reply

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