SHRUBS BELONGING TO THE ROSE FAMILY. 51 



6om very similar to a wild rose ; unfortunately, the 



flower at maturity turns a homely, pale magenta, but 



never purple. The fruit of this shrubby plant is like 



a flat raspberry, witli little or no flavor ; 



the long stems are hairy-bristly, not ^,rt)l> 



thorny. 



The wild red raspberry i^Ru- 

 hus strigosus) is thickly distrib- 

 uted over the country from 

 Labrador southward to New 

 Jersey and the mountains of 

 North Carolina, and westward 



to Minnesota and Missouri, 

 occupies the roadsides in 

 some localities in New York 

 and New England for 

 miles together ; and in 

 many of the old pasture 

 lands of the White Moun- 

 tain region it grows so lux- 

 uriantly, together with the 



high-bush blackberry, that it forms almost impassable 

 thickets. The thorny canes, however, are not nearly 

 so murderous as those of the blackberry, and if one is 

 not afraid of a few scratches, a day's " raspberrying " 

 in July, when the season is good, will result in a 

 heaping eight-quart pail of fruit which, in my esti- 



Wild Ked Easpberry. 



