This unique, disease-resistant, Canadian variety forms an attractive, upright small shrub. Selby produces good crops of sweet and tasty, large, purple-red berries.
A favorite Polish variety, Siewka K1 gooseberry bears abundant, sweet, flavorful, purplish red berries. An attractive and compact 2-3 ft. tall shrub, Siewka K1 is easy to grow and disease-resistant.
Orus 8 gooseberry is actually a hybrid between a black currant and a red gooseberry just like the famed jostabery, though the Orus 8 gooseberry looks much more like a gooseberry than a currant. Fruits from Orus 8 are deep purple and considered the best for fresh eating of any gooseberry. Orus 8 plants have some thorns but less than a typical gooseberry.
Originally from Canada, we discovered this unique variety at the National Germplasm Repository in Corvallis, Oregon. Thornless, disease-resistant and easy to grow, Shefford bears good crops of large golden yellow, sweet, crisp and tasty berries.
Invicta is a mildew resistant selection that produces a green to white berry with exceptionally sweet flavor. Fruit quality and high yields make this variety a great choice for any grower.
Jeanne Gooseberry is suitable for commercial production as well as home garden plantings. The deep maroon-red fruits are medium in size, averaging five grams.
Amish Gooseberry are highly vigorous with sturdy upright canes. The fruits are deep red with good flavor when they ripen in July. Yields are consistently high due to some resistance to powdery mildew and other fungi.
Pixwell Gooseberry produces small to medium, pink berries with excellent sweet/tart flavor on nearly thornless canes that can be eaten fresh or transformed into jellies and pies. Very cold hardy, these plants require very little maintenance after establishment.