Related Articles:
Better Blackberries for Your Garden
The Best of the Blues
Great Gadgets for Under $50
Growing Sweetness
 
Garden Resources:
June 2003: Garden Sources
 



Sunset

Spinach, Asparagus, Strawberry Salad
Great spring flavors: a salad with roasted asparagus and strawberries.


 
Bigger, Better Blackberries
continued  PAGE 3 OF 3

Planting and Care
It is best to plant blackberries in November or December, but you can do so anytime as long as they are watered during dry periods. Many new, improved selections are available at nurseries and garden centers, but if you can't find them, they can be mail-ordered.

Jason says the plants are really tough. Once established, they need little water and have few problems with pests or diseases. Ripe berries will attract hungry birds, so you might need to throw netting over the plants when berries are present. Jason fertilizes in spring with an all-purpose, slow-release product such as 12-6-6 at a rate of 8 tablespoons per plant. After the Fourth of July cutback, he lightly fertilizes plants with calcium nitrate to force new growth.

Find a sunny spot in your garden, and plant a few of the new, improved selections. Grow them on a fence, wall, or trellis, and you won't have to wade through thorny thickets in search of summer's favorite berry.

Blackberry Trellis
A) Select the two largest canes, and cut the rest to the ground. Allow one cane to grow a few inches above the 24-inch wire and the other to grow a few inches above the 48-inch wire. Then cut each cane 1 inch below the wires. B) Side shoots will sprout at the cutoff point and should be trained to the horizontal wires.


"Bigger, Better Blackberries" is from the June 2003 issue of Southern Living.

1 | 2 | 3
Advertisement