BLACKBERRIES
Easy to grow and always productive, blackberries seldom have problems with pests and diseases. Several varieties are thornless, although many of the best-tasting blackberries grow on canes that are well-defended with stickers. All blackberries bear fruit on one-year-old canes. In other words, the new canes that grow one summer bear fruit the next summer. Try blackberries in a place where they can grow into a robust hedge that deters unwanted visitors — including hungry deer.
Simplify pruning and maintenance
Prune annually after the final harvest. Cut to the ground any canes that bore fruit, which reduces possible disease problems and makes way for a new crop of canes. In late summer, pinch-off the tips of the new canes to encourage short lateral branches to form.
Wear gloves
Wear beekeeping gloves when pruning thorny blackberry plants. The gloves’ protective gauntlets reach up to your elbows.
Want more plants?
Bend the tip of a blackberry stem to the ground in summer and weigh it down with a stone. By the following spring, the tip will have roots, and it can be dug and moved to a new spot.
Plant new patches
Plant a new patch every 5 to 10 years because cultivated blackberries pick up pests that lower productivity over time. Choose a new spot as far from the old site — and any wild brambles — as possible. Purchase only plants certified as virus- or disease-free.
Cold climate protection
In frigid climates, separate the blackberry stems from the support and spread them out on the ground. Cover them thickly with conifer branches or dried mulch to protect against severe cold. Uncover them in spring and prune back any canes that show no leaf buds by late spring.
Decorate
Enhance an archway or fence with the lush foliage and pretty white flowers of thorn less blackberries, such as ‘Navaho’ or ‘Chester’. Or create a fan espalier to best see stems and fruit. In midsummer, when the current year’s canes are pruned back to the ground, begin training the new green stems into a fan shape by fastening them with plastic ties to a grid or trellis.
Pick them dead ripe
Blackberries taste best when they are fully ripe, which is often a day or two after they turn black. Harvest when they’re still glossy but have just begun to soften. Blackberries are easy to freeze, or you can use them to make cobblers, pies or wonderful jelly