For the most part; change the "me" to "I" and it's perfect. Also, it would be "better" if you said "Hollie and I picked the raspberries." That is called active tense, as opposed to passive tense.
Can Adam be picked up by you
At the Park, a farmer was handing out free samples of his freshly picked raspberries.
It depends who's doing the picking. I have picked, you have picked, they have picked, we have picked; but he / she / someone (named) / something has picked.
That is the correct spelling of the word "pick" (a tool or choice, to choose).
yes
Joan never attended school and coould neither read nor write. She received no formal grammar training except that which she picked up from her parents and listening to others speak.
That is the correct spelling for "interception" (caught or picked up while in transit).
Raspberries can be harvested all the way from mid-summer through to the first frost. The fruit is ripe when it can be easily be removed from the plant without being squashed. Fruit ripens at different times, so you will be able to harvest raspberries throughout the season
a list of some are: raspberries, strawberries, blueberries, apples, cherries, potatoes, or anything that needs to be picked by hand, or sorted by hand In southwest Louisiana they are used in the sugarcane and crawfish fields.
The chief difference2 between raspberries and blackberries is that raspberries leave the receptacle on the plant when the fruit is picked. This tends to make whole blackberries a better source of fibre than raspberries. (taken from http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A7209623)
No Our Lady's Grammar School isn't the top School In Northern Ireland Because its academic results where not so good this year and that this year for picking the first years they only picked the ones with B1s AND C1S and there where very little As in it . The Top school is Sacred Heart Grammar School Newry and has been for the last 2 years.
"Tienes que escribes" is not good grammar. "¿Tienes lo que escribes?" would mean "Do you have what you're writing?", perhaps to ask if someone's taking down all the notes or has picked an essay topic. More likely, it's "tienes que escribir", meaning "You have to write" or "Do you have to write?"