Agiseek home

Blackberry Fruit

Become a Partner
Baby Cakestm Thornless Blackberry
Prices start at : 59.95 USD / #2 Container range: 1.2 - 1.8 gallons (5 - 8 liters)

In most regions Baby Cakestm Blackberry will produce twice in one season, giving your double the harvest! It produces on second year canes, so be patient with it. Unfortunately the price you often paid for those delicious, chin-staining berries was pricked...
  • Fruiting Time: Summer
  • Botanical Name: Rubus x 'APF-236T'
  • Soil Type: Rich, organic, well drained in the ground and in pots
  • Foliage: Deciduous
  • Brand: Nature Hills Nursery
  • Growth Rate: Fast
Nebraska
Omaha
Prime-Ark Freedom Blackberry
Prices start at : 39.95 USD / Sold Out

If birds are eating too many berries, we recommend using BirdBlock Protective Netting. Prime-Ark Freedom offers the added bonus of high disease resistance to rust and strong cold-hardiness.
  • Bearing Age: 1st year
  • Ripening Time: Late summer/fall
  • Plant Height: 5-6'
  • Hardiness Zone: 4-8
Oregon
Cottage Grove
Reasons For Berry Problems With A Blackberry Plant
However, you can take steps to make sure that your blackberry plants don't end up with these diseases.First, make sure that the blackberry plants you buy are certified virus-free.Second, keep wild blackberry brambles at least 150 yards away from domestic...
Ohio
Willoughby
Container Grown Blackberries: How To Grow Blackberries In A Container
For blackberries grown in a pot, choose containers that are 5 gallons or larger with room for at least 6 inches of soil. Mulch around the base of the plants or heel the pots into the soil and then mulch over top.A little TLC and your container grown blackberries...
Ohio
Willoughby
Picking Blackberries: How And When To Harvest Blackberries
The fruit will only last about a day after it is picked, so either refrigerate or eat it as soon as possible.Never pick wet blackberries, as this will encourage them to mold or squish.
Ohio
Willoughby
Triple Crown Thornless Blackberry
Prices start at : 29.95 USD / 5" Container

The glossy, black berries are not only delicious, but a lovely accent amid the bright green foliage. Triple Crown Thornless Blackberry brings late summer harvests of large, juicy blackberries.
  • Mature Spread: 3 - 5 feet
  • Mature Height: 4 - 5 feet
  • Botanical Name: Rubus x 'Triple Crown'
  • Brand: Nature Hills Nursery
  • Foliage: Green
Nebraska
Omaha
Arapaho Thornless Blackberry
Prices start at : 29.95 USD / 5" Container

As if that isn't enough to sell you on the benefits of Arapaho, remember that they don't need a pollinator, so a single vine will produce for you. But, honestly, once you start picking these delicious berries, you're going to just be wishing you'd have...
  • Soil Type: Widely Adaptable
  • Foliage: Green
  • Flower Color: White
  • Mature Spread: 4 - 7 feet
  • Botanical Name: Rubus 'Arapaho Thornless'
Nebraska
Omaha
Chester Thornless Blackberry
Prices start at : 29.95 USD / 5" Container

Perfect for fresh eating and jams. But we've never heard of anyone being satisfied with just one Chester vine! Order two or three to really enjoy the bounty. Easy to grow and tolerating a wide range of temperatures and soil types, Chester was designed...
  • Botanical Name: Rubus 'Chester Thornless'
  • Sun Exposure: Full Sun
  • Soil Type: Well Drained
  • Mature Height: 3 - 4 feet
  • Foliage: Green
Nebraska
Omaha
Triple Crown Blackberry
Prices start at : 39.95 USD / 1 pcs

You will have more than enough blackberries to share with your family and friends, and they will be amazed by the fact that your homegrown berries are larger and sweeter than varieties found in local grocery stores.
  • Mature Height: 4-5 ft.
  • Growth Rate: Fast
  • Spacing: 3-5 ft.
  • Fruit Color: Black
  • Drought Tolerance: Moderate
South Carolina
Fort Mill
What Are Marionberries: Learn About Marionberry Growing And Care
Waldo of the U.S. Department of Agriculture and was tested in the Willamette Valley. Tamp the soil around the plant firmly and water it in well. Development of this berry began in 1945 through the efforts of George F.
Ohio
Willoughby
Fertilizing Blackberry Plants – Learn When To Fertilize Blackberry Bushes
Plant your berries in full sun, allowing plenty of room to grow. The soil should be well-draining, sandy loam rich in organic matter. Well, a single healthy blackberry plant can supply up to 10 pounds of berries per year!Now that you have planted your...
Ohio
Willoughby
Information On Growing Blackberry Bushes
Also, cut the plants back to about 6 inches after you plant them. However, they require fertilizer and water. If you are wondering about how to grow blackberries, you need to look at your yard and find the perfect place for growing blackberry plants.
Ohio
Willoughby
Witches\' Broom Fungus – Symptoms Of Witches\' Broom In Blackberries
The results in all cases are multiple shoots arising from a central point on a stem terminating in a mass that resembles a broom. If, however, they are bothering you, simply prune them out of the plant.In fact, the appearance of witches' broom in some...
Ohio
Willoughby
Blackberry, Prime-Ark Freedom
Prices start at : 16.99 USD / 5 Bare Root Plants

Brand new release from University of Arkansas, Blackberry, Prime-Ark Freedom is the world's first thornless, primocane-fruiting blackberry. It is self-fertile and ideal for growing organically at home due to very little need for a spray.
  • Life Cycle: Perennial
  • Ornamental Use: Beds, Borders
  • Genus: Rubus
  • Height: 5-6 feet
  • Sun: Full Sun
  • Growth Habit: Erect
Pennsylvania
Warminster
Blackberry, Polar Berry
Prices start at : 14.99 USD / 1 Plant

Time for something completely different: this is the only white blackberry on the market! Unique creamy white berries have a classic wild blackberry flavor with just a hint of citrus.
  • Sun: Full Sun
  • Zone: 5-9
  • Genus: Rubus
  • Spread: 48 inches
  • Food Use: Edible Fruit
Pennsylvania
Warminster
Blackberry Algal Spot – Treating Algal Spots On Blackberries
If the color comes off on your fingers, it is a. However, when the infection spreads, it can girdle the canes or even cause splitting that allows other infections to set in, and ultimately this can damage the canes enough to kill them and severely limit...
Ohio
Willoughby
My Blackberries Are Rotting: Reasons For Fruit Rot Of Blackberry Plants
Small, black patches may appear on any part of the plant. Fruit rot favors humid environments. Are vigorous and easy to grow, but the plants may be afflicted by fruit rot, a common fungal disease that affects various fruits and ornamental plants in moist,...
Ohio
Willoughby
Rust In Blackberries: Treating Blackberries With Rust Disease
These, in turn, produce spores which infect leaves on primocanes.freestar.queue.push(function() { googletag.display("div-gpt-ad-300x250-ATF-1"); });The fungus that causes rust in blackberries overwinters on canes or lingering uredinia.
Ohio
Willoughby
Blackberry Pruning – How To Trim Blackberry Bushes
If the canes are shorter than 24 inches, simply prune off the top inch or so of the cane.While you are tip pruning, you can also prune off any diseased or dead canes.In the summer, after the blackberries are done fruiting, you will need to do clean up...
Ohio
Willoughby
Propagating Blackberries – Rooting Blackberries From Cuttings
The young shoots are simply bent over to the ground and then covered with a few inches of soil. Straight cuts should be made nearest the crown with an angled cut made further away.Once the cuttings have been taken, they're usually bundled together (with...
Ohio
Willoughby
Blackberry Bushes In Winter – How To Protect Blackberry Plants
Pruning blackberries in winter is part of blackberry bush winter care.Before you begin snipping blackberry bushes in winter, you need to identify which canes on your plants are first year canes (primocanes).
Ohio
Willoughby
Blackberries Not Ripening – What To Do When Blackberries Won\'t Ripen
Just a few affected druplets on one fruit make the entire berry inedible.Redberry mite will stick around on the plant through the winter and infest more vines the next year, so it is a problem to tackle immediately.
Ohio
Willoughby
Diseases Of Blackberries – What Is Blackberry Calico Virus
These yellow areas are especially prevalent on fruiting canes. Badly discolored leaves may be simply picked from plants or you can leave BCV-infected plants to grow and enjoy the unusual leaf patterns the disease creates.If blackberry calico virus is...
Ohio
Willoughby
Blackberry, Natchez
Prices start at : 14.99 USD / 1 Plant

With Strong disease resistance Natchez is perfect for home growing. Natchez Blackberries have a 9.5% sugar content which makes them great for jams, jellies, juice mixes or just eating fresh off the bush.
  • Zone: 4-9
  • Growth Habit: Bush
  • Spread: 36-48 inches
  • Ornamental Use: Beds
  • Food Use: Edible Fruit, Pie, Sauce
  • Planting Time: Fall, Spring
Pennsylvania
Warminster
Blackberry, Prime-Ark Traveler
Prices start at : 14.99 USD / 1 Plant

The second thornless primocane-fruiting blackberry released by the University of Arkansas, Prime-Ark Traveler, produces medium-large berries, with good yields and has excellent, vigorous plant.
  • Spread: 2-3 feet
  • Ornamental Use: Beds, Borders
  • Planting Time: Fall, Spring
  • Food Use: Edible Fruit
  • Height: 4-6 feet
  • Growth Habit: Erect
Pennsylvania
Warminster
Blackberry, Ouachita
Prices start at : 14.99 USD / 1 Plant

Tall canes allow for denser planting, increasing potential yield; fruiting extends for five weeks. Vigorous, easy to manage plants are garlanded with lovely large white flowers. Another berry breakthrough from the University of Arkansas, the Harvard of...
  • Life Cycle: Perennial
  • Zone: 5-8
  • Sun: Full Sun
  • Height: 48-72 inches
  • Food Use: Edible Fruit, Pie, Sauce
  • Genus: Rubus
Pennsylvania
Warminster
Blackberry, Osage
Prices start at : 14.99 USD / 1 Plant

This new thornless blackberry bred by Dr. John Clark at University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture is tops for exceptional flavor and sweetness. Ripening in mid-early season, plants produce medium-sized berries with excellent fresh-harvest...
  • Zone: 6-8
  • Life Cycle: Perennial
  • Food Use: Edible Fruit, Pie, Sauce
  • Sun: Full Sun
  • Genus: Rubus
  • Spread: 24-36 inches
Pennsylvania
Warminster