Sharpblue Southern Highbush Blueberry
A blueberry variety for areas that receive few chill hours! Sharpblue is a low to no chill blueberry making it a great pick for growers in warmer climates.
A blueberry variety for areas that receive few chill hours! Sharpblue is a low to no chill blueberry making it a great pick for growers in warmer climates.
Finally a blueberry for areas that don’t receive any chill hours! Biloxi Southern Highbush Blueberry is a low to no chill blueberry making it a great pick for the deep South as well as California growers.
Jewel Southern Highbush Blueberry produces the largest fruits of any southern highbush blueberry we’ve seen! Being partially evergreen, it also makes a great landscape plant and is an excellent choice for growers in mild winter climates who might not always receive enough chill hours to grow northern highbush blueberries.
A tough and resilient southern highbush blueberry selected in Mississippi where it thrives in heavy soils, summer heat and sudden early frosts.
A very recent release from the University of Arkansas’s blueberry breeding program and one of the best for southern and West Coast growers. Norman Southern Highbush Blueberry produces crops as abundant as Bluecrop or Duke, making it viable for commercial production in warmer areas of the country. Berries are firm, very tasty and ship well. Not recommended for areas with late spring frosts.
O’Neal Southern Highbush Blueberry is perhaps the earliest ripening of any southern highbush blueberry and often touted as the tastiest too!
A new patented variety from Florida, Emerald bears extremely heavy crops of large, sweet and flavorful, medium-blue berries. Great for growers in the Northwest, it is also a superior variety for California and other regions with mild winters.
Nocturne Blueberry Bush is an exciting new release from the USDA that features delicious dark black fruit on a very ornamental 5-6 foot tall bush. Requires 800+ chill hours to set fruit.
Sunshine Daisy Bush is an excellent evergreen ground cover or border planting! We were turned on to this one by our friends on Orcas Island who plant it along the edges of their pathways so that when the moon starlight catches the white edges of the leaves at night it reflects back to highlight the pathway’s edge.