Blackberry Quachita Plant Rubus

$7.99 sales tax

Plants for sale are Blackberry Quachita pp 17162 Rubus plant Blackberries grow fast!!! The Ouachita (wash-uh-taw) Blackberry is our newest large, sweet thornless blackberry bred by the University of Arkansas. It has excelle..

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Description

Plants for sale are Blackberry Quachita pp 17162 Rubus plant

Blackberry Quachita Plants  grow fast!!! The Ouachita (wash-uh-taw) Blackberry is our newest large, sweet thornless blackberry bred by the University of Arkansas. It has excellent flavor and is very prolific. The Ouachita Blackberry has very upright and erect canes. The fruit storage and handling potential of the Ouachita Blackberry is very good, near that of Navaho; hardiness similar to other Arkansas thornless berries.

Each plant I offer is Hybridized and grown from tissue cultures to be a disease free exact replica of the mother plant. Plants are between 5-16″ tall.We recommend using Bio Spectrum Organic fertilizer located In our store.

Blackberry Quachita Plant Care and Growing Instructions

Blackberry Quachita Plant Site Selection and Site Preparation

Ideally, a prospective commercial blackberry grower should select a site with good air and water drainage.

Avoid low lying areas. This minimizes the probability of frost injury to flowers and newly developing fruit, as well as flood injuries during periods of excess rainfall.

Although blackberries do well in most soils, deep well drained soils are ideal. Blackberries perform best at a soil pH between 5.5 and 6.5.

Drip irrigation, as compared to overhead irrigation, will minimize subsequent weed control.

Upon arrival bareroot plants should be kept moist, but not wet. If these plants arrive prior to the anticipated planting date they can be stored in the refrigerator (small quantity) or be heeled in a trench (larger quantity) to stay moist.

To heel plants in, simply dig a trench and cover the roots with damp soil. While planting do not allow the blackberry roots to dry out. Cut back the shoots to about 6 inches in length and plant to the same depth they were in the nursery. Spread the roots but try to avoid excessive root bending in the hole. Remove air pockets by compacting the soil.

Plant spacing is cultivar dependent. Space erect cultivars from 2 to 4 feet apart within a row. Space trailing blackberries 3 to 5 feet within a row. The spacing between rows can be 10 to 15 feet depending on plant vigor.

Pollination

Blackberry fruit is borne on the current year’s growth with usually 10 to 20 flowers per cluster. Blackberry briar bushes and raspberries are an aggregate fruit with individual pistils which form druplets.

To obtain a large well formed berry, make sure most of the individual pistils in an inflorescence are pollinated. Smaller or imperfect fruit are often a result of inadequate pollination.

Blackberries range from completely self-fruitful to completely self-unfruitful. Most erect blackberries are fruitful yet trailing cultivars often require cross pollination. Reports show that cross pollination results in the highest yields.

Several different blackberry cultivars should be planted together to insure cross pollination particularly if wild blackberries are not in the vicinity. Additionally, Blackberry flowers produce nectar and pollen that attract bees which serve as pollinators.

Leafy Stem Cuttings

This is the most feasible method to produce large quantities of plants. Leafy stem cuttings may be propagated from the apical 4 to 6 inches of cane when the cane is succulent but still Blackberries do not require much fertilizer in most soils.

Fertilizer

Blackberry roots are located close to the surface and excess fertilizer can burn leaves or even kill plants. Apply fertilizer in an 18-inch ring around the plant, or parallel to the row 12 to 18 inches from the row center.

Fertilization with 10-10-10 N-P-K with micronutrients is satisfactory. Do not apply fertilizer at planting in the winter; rather wait until late spring or summer.

If applied during planting, fertilization can injure a plant. Early fertilization can also waste fertilizer. Roots may be too small to absorb nutrients.

During the establishment year fertilize with about 1/4 pound per plant or up to 5 lbs per 100 foot of row.

During the second year and thereafter fertilize in the winter and in the summer (after harvest) with 1/4 to 1/2 lb per plant or about 10 lbs per 100 feet of row.

Further Reading

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