Anna | Ralphs Gooseberry

Botanic gardens are increasingly turning to "resurrection horticulture"—using old seeds from herbarium specimens or digging up dormant root systems at abandoned Victorian estates.

It has become the "Holy Grail" of heirloom Ribes hunters. Blogs like The Gooseberry Gazette and forums on the National Fruit Collection at Brogdale frequently discuss "The Anna." anna ralphs gooseberry

Excitement was palpable. DNA analysis was attempted, but unfortunately, the plant turned out to be a mislabeled ‘Leveller’—a good gooseberry, but not the Anna. If you are an heirloom hunter and you miraculously locate a cutting of an authentic Anna Ralphs, or if a nursery finally manages to micropropagate a surviving specimen, here is how you would treat it. DNA analysis was attempted, but unfortunately, the plant

Post-WWII, Britain and America shifted toward sweet, hardy fruits. The gooseberry market crumbled in favor of strawberries and grapes. The ‘Anna Ralphs’, which required precise pruning and rich, loamy soil, was deemed "fussy." By 1955, the last known specimen at the RHS Garden Wisley was labeled "status: lost." The Hunt for the Ghost Berry For the last ten years, a subculture of fruit detectives has been hunting for the Anna Ralphs Gooseberry . The gooseberry market crumbled in favor of strawberries

The seeds are on their way to the Millennium Seed Bank at Wakehurst, UK. While seeds that old rarely germinate (gooseberry seeds have a notoriously short viability), there is a non-zero chance.

Gooseberries are susceptible to a fungal disease called American gooseberry mildew ( Sphaerotheca mors-uvae ). In the early 20th century, this disease decimated European soft fruit. While some cultivars like ‘Invicta’ proved resistant, the delicate, thin-skinned ‘Anna Ralphs’ was tragicically vulnerable.

Her specialty? The gooseberry ( Ribes uva-crispa ).