Also receive the Daily newsletter including gardening tips, weather, astronomical events, and more.
Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Blackberries
ADVERTISEMENT
Hi Mike,
You can certainly do some thinning out of any dead or dying canes, and tipping back of some of the longer healthy canes. You could also take some photos of the plant and bring it to a local nursery, where someone might be able to identify the type you have—this will help you when it comes time to do a bigger pruning job, which you will want to do to keep the canes fruitful.
I would like to plant my blackberries this fall, but when exactly would be best to do it? I love in the Texas panhandle, on the border of zone 6b/7a.
Hi Shannon,
Dormant, bare root blackberries should be planted mid- to late winter for summer berries.
I am not a plant person at all but my stepfather passed away right after he planted these blackberries and they are so good I'm trying to keep them growing and producing. It has been going so well for the last 11 years but now I have a problem they are "trailing?" and as I'm weeding around them and trying to stake them I can't do it because both ends are in the ground it's a mess so do I cut one end some don't look that established but others are deep in the ground and look like they've been there for years. They weren't like that last year can I cut one end without killing both ends? I don't know what to do can you help me please and Thank you.
“Trailing” blackberries are a type. The canes grow along the ground and they must be tied to a trellis to keep the fruit off the ground. However, they are not cold hardy and do not produce in cold regions.
Semi-erect blackberries tend to grow close to the ground, like vines. Assuming you do not have true trailing berries (thus, you must reside in a warm region), perhaps you have semi-erect berries. Sources suggest that semi-erect berries become upright and branched in their second year—and yours are in their eleventh year!
We can not find any information about blackberry canes self-rooting at the tip. As for cutting one end without killing the plant, you want to avoid cutting the base, the source. Presumably, it is thicker than the tip of the cane.
Perhaps your grandfather pruned and you simply did not realize it. He must have had a system! If it is as thickly tangled as you seem to suggest, It may be time to cut them back (in late winter, to about 7 feet) and essentially start again, securing them to wire fencing or the like. Such hearty plants will probably withstand even a (forgive us) gross over cutting on your part, but it will give you a fresh start and, hopefully, quite a few years of wonderful berries.
We hope this helps!
I have quite a few wild blackberries around my pond, I was wondering what to spray them with to enhance their productivity and control insects? Also, when to spray?
My blackberries probegate that way a long branch hits the ground and the piece in the ground roots... that is great make sure the one that rooted is secure in the ground if not.. add dirt around it and then simply cut the stem it came from ... strawberries do it the same way.... since the canes don't live but 2 years this is a way to prolong the live... but usually around the 1st cane others shoot up and the older one dies off ... cutting to the old dead ones helps... my cats love it in my bush but this year i had to get in there and cut some of it back to encourage growth and more fruit.. last year i had an enormous amount of green but little fruit because i did not prune last Sring. Happy gardening ... let me know how your are now?
Is it possible to grow tayberries in Lake Charles, LA (very south Louisiana!!). Some blackberries THRIVE here but NO raspberries!
Hi, Bob, this is a new one on us: tayberry. Who knew? As you know, this is a hybrid cross of a blackberry and a raspberry, and many people believe it to be the most flavorful of the brambles! (Where have we been?) The tayberry is very thorny (double the pleasure, double the pain?), and it requires the planting, training, and pruning techniques usually applied to the blackberry. But will it grow in Louisiana…? We have no evidence, pro or con, for or against, yea or nay.
You might contact and ask an expert at the LSU Agricultural Center about tayberries: agstusv@lsu.edu
LSU Ag Center has a page that suggests “Raspberries are not well adapted to Louisiana conditions. Afternoon or partial shade my a production. Dorman Red is the only raspberry that has consistently produced fruit in Louisiana. It has training canes and cae be managed similar to dewberries. It has medium-size, attractive fruit, with average to poor flavor: http://www.lsuagcenter.com/NR/rdonlyres/5DD47469-DA9F-4398-AD57-85FDB3E9327E/27320/pub1553blackberriesFINAL.pdf
Seemed too good to be true…
So that’s all we’ve got. If you find out from the LSU Ag Center, let us know!
I have a ton of huge berries but they are tart, even when I wait until they are black as night and fall off easily. Is there anything I can do?