Blackberry Plants
Rubus species
Traditional breeders have been working with the rubus family of cane fruits (which includes blackberry and raspberry) since the late 1800's. There have been many amazing crosses created; we offer both old favorites and new, improved introduct. . . SHOW MORE
Rubus species
Traditional breeders have been working with the rubus family of cane fruits (which includes blackberry and raspberry) since the late 1800's. There have been many amazing crosses created; we offer both old favorites and new, improved introductions. Our selections are easy to grow and also self-fertile. They produce reliably large loads of fruit for decades and they have delicious differences in flavor. Not only that, but we have many varieties without thorns!
Blackberries are prohibited to HI.
SHOW LESSCascade Blackberry
Rubus ursinus x loganberry 'Cascade' Originally introduced in 1940, this was an exciting cross between the highly flavorful but very small NW Nativ...
View full detailsCascade Trailing Blackberry
Rubus ursinus Every summer from Alaska to Northern California, fruit lovers "in the know" pick (and trip over) our sweet, especially tasty, native...
View full detailsSweetie Pie Thornless Blackberry
Rubus watson x 'Sweetie Pie' 'Sweetie Pie' is a new blackberry cultivar with thornless canes and an erect growth pattern. Developed and released by...
View full detailsChester Thornless Blackberry
Rubus fruitcosus 'Chester' To extend the harvest, plant Chester, which starts its late season, huge production right when Triple Crown leaves off. ...
View full detailsColumbia Sunrise Thornless Blackberry
Rubus subg. Rubus watson 'Columbia Sunrise' These new delicious, trailing, thornless blackberries ripen one to two weeks before any other thornless...
View full detailsHall's Beauty Blackberry
Rubus x 'Hall's Beauty' Large, double flowers on a thornless trailing floricane blackberry? She's a beauty, all right - Hall's Beauty, that is! The...
View full detailsLoch Ness Thornless Blackberry
Rubus fruticosus 'Loch Ness'Try this new, richly sweet/tart, thornless Scottish blackberry for its monstrously large, shiny black fruit and better ...
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