Really interesting, this vid was awesome thank-you for sharing,we bought a white blackberry today and will be adding it to our little fruit run this weekend, much love from Canadian proud get outdoors ❤️ 🌱
I have a couple of these whiteberry plants that seemingly came out of nowhere last year, I almost weed whacked them cause they looked like weeds to me . This year they produced some very large berries.
@@rarefruit2320 are yours native/random, or did you buy a specific variety? I'm thinking of trying some white blackberries but want some that actually taste good :)
Living in Oregon for years I’ve only ever ate wild Himalayan blackberries. We would pick 5 gallon buckets of the hill at my parents house. Thorns sucked and seeds were large but the flavor is great and sweet. Made lots of jelly with them. I’d like one that can survive Alaskan winters.
They aren't available this year. I'm heartbroken. I moved and had to leave my white blackberries behind. I went to order more and they are nowhere to be found. Will you offer them again?
We wont be putting our live plants up for sale until spring (March onward) of this year, as we are not doing the pre-order process this year! We should have the white blackberries then, but it is not a 100% guarantee!
I bought these from Baker Creek. Three starter bushes in 2017. For 3 years they barely did anything, they didn't die but they barely grew and never blossomed. Suddenly in 2020, all three took off and multiplied and multiplied and multiplied. Since they erupted from the winter in early May, they have sent up plants covering a 75 ft by 75 ft section of my yard. They are out of control and totally taken over everything. They have such extreme prickers on them, I'm having one heck of a time getting rid of them. They go through my best rose pruning gloves and even poke through a pair of heavy duty welding gloves I bought. I'm not sure what to do. Had I known these were so incredibly invasive I would not have put them in. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. I wouldn't mind, except the area they have overtaken is my vegetable garden and now I can grow nothing else. Besides that they have crowded one another so severely that I can't get through the prickers to pick any of the berries. The thorns on them are lethal, the worst I've ever seen. Help?
Sorry to hear that! Blackberries are vigorous runners, so every couple of months, scouting around to remove any runners may be your best option to keep them in their designated area. You may want to consider lopping the cane off with a pair of pruners first so you aren't poked as you work to dig up the rest of the plant.
@@RareSeedsBC I'm glad you replied. I've sent a couple of emails through to Leah asking if you'd be interested in getting a bunch of these back since you don't offer them anymore. I don't want any money for them, I'd be happy to ship them if you can just cover the postage. The berries I got early this year, before the growth explosion begin, we're unlike anything I tried. I wanted to give you the opportunity to have them before I dispose of them. Please let me know. The order info lists them as *snowbank* variety. Here is info to help you look up my order minus my address of course ----------------------------------- Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds Shipment Notification - Order #101698997 Thank you for your recent purchase from Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds. We are pleased to inform you that on 3/27/2019 the following item has been processed. The following tracking numbers were added to this shipment: *Deleted for privacy* Shipped To: Lisa xxx xxx xxx, CT United States Ship Method: Standard Shipping (They came UPS) Blackberry, Snowbank "White" (2 Plants, Ships March-June) SKU: PL166 Ordered:2 Shipped:2 Sincerely, Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds
@@guaporeturns9472 Just the fact that you would recommend that tells me you could care less about the life of all living creatures on this earth especially the insects earthworms and microbial life that are the root of all other life forms. Very very sad
i bought a variety called polar berry for an experiment...i expected them to not survive in my winter 3B. now that its spring theyre starting to bud up yay
yes we do! :) but please read our international ordering policy -> International Customers: The shipping charge for international orders is 20% of the order, with a $5.00 minimum. Processing of International orders may be delayed if your country requires additional documentation. Once your order ships, it could take up to 3-4 weeks to arrive, which we have no control over, as it depends on how long it takes the order to clear customs in your country. International customers are responsible for checking with their local customs office to see what is, and is not permitted to be shipped to their area. We are not responsible, and cannot refund for seeds that are confiscated, destroyed, or returned by customs. You are also responsible for all taxes or customs your country may levy. Due to shipping restrictions, Baker Creek Seed Collections are limited to USA customers only. We are unable to obtain phytosanitary certificates from the USDA at this time due to our seeds being untreated and untested. The testing needed by a lot of countries requires a large amount of seed, which generally takes the entire lot sent to us by our growers, which means we would have none left to sell. Flower, garlic and onion bulbs, as well as live plants, cannot be shipped outside of the U.S.
I hope you guys offer this again! I missed it last year along with your variety banana plants!
Really interesting, this vid was awesome thank-you for sharing,we bought a white blackberry today and will be adding it to our little fruit run this weekend, much love from Canadian proud get outdoors ❤️ 🌱
why do these videos make want to cry? im so thankful for how much yall care
I never wanted to try cause I thought it would be bland... now knowing the history I am wanting!! 😋
thanks for the info, great context given awesome upload!
I can't wait for mine to start producing 🌱💕
Nice i love love to grow all of those ❤
I’m watching while eating dried white berries🧍🏻♀️
I got two of those seedlings. They are doing well. Can't wait to see them bear for the first time.
I have a couple of these whiteberry plants that seemingly came out of nowhere last year, I almost weed whacked them cause they looked like weeds to me
. This year they produced some very large berries.
Me too but mine aren’t very good
@@rarefruit2320 are yours native/random, or did you buy a specific variety? I'm thinking of trying some white blackberries but want some that actually taste good :)
I wish you would make it available again at Baker Creek
Living in Oregon for years I’ve only ever ate wild Himalayan blackberries. We would pick 5 gallon buckets of the hill at my parents house. Thorns sucked and seeds were large but the flavor is great and sweet. Made lots of jelly with them. I’d like one that can survive Alaskan winters.
Such a beautiful memory to have ❣️
Do blackberries require some chill? Like, would they grow in tropical areas?
Hi Nunya, blackberries do require some chill, anywhere between 300 and 900 chill hours below 45F.
@@RareSeedsBC TY. Now I know not to buy if someone offer them to me. It's never cold here! 😭
Will they ever be available as seeds?
probably not as seeds :(
@@RareSeedsBC such Cruel world we live in😭
I'm drinking some homemade missouri blackberry wine right now lol
So cool. Blessings.
They aren't available this year. I'm heartbroken. I moved and had to leave my white blackberries behind. I went to order more and they are nowhere to be found. Will you offer them again?
We wont be putting our live plants up for sale until spring (March onward) of this year, as we are not doing the pre-order process this year! We should have the white blackberries then, but it is not a 100% guarantee!
@@RareSeedsBC thank you for replying. I'll keep an eye out. Many blessings.
Go back to old house and dig up some roots lol.
hi. I'm new friend. thanks for sharing 😊
Just got a tray of these tissue cultures!
I bought 2 from them this year
Have you received them? What do you think?
They were small but are alive and growing today...I'll. See how they do this year
Can these grow in the UK
Yes, if you're able to find a source at a local plant nursey, they should grow quite well for you.
I bought these from Baker Creek. Three starter bushes in 2017. For 3 years they barely did anything, they didn't die but they barely grew and never blossomed. Suddenly in 2020, all three took off and multiplied and multiplied and multiplied. Since they erupted from the winter in early May, they have sent up plants covering a 75 ft by 75 ft section of my yard. They are out of control and totally taken over everything. They have such extreme prickers on them, I'm having one heck of a time getting rid of them. They go through my best rose pruning gloves and even poke through a pair of heavy duty welding gloves I bought. I'm not sure what to do. Had I known these were so incredibly invasive I would not have put them in. Any advice would be greatly appreciated. I wouldn't mind, except the area they have overtaken is my vegetable garden and now I can grow nothing else. Besides that they have crowded one another so severely that I can't get through the prickers to pick any of the berries. The thorns on them are lethal, the worst I've ever seen. Help?
Sorry to hear that! Blackberries are vigorous runners, so every couple of months, scouting around to remove any runners may be your best option to keep them in their designated area. You may want to consider lopping the cane off with a pair of pruners first so you aren't poked as you work to dig up the rest of the plant.
@@RareSeedsBC I'm glad you replied. I've sent a couple of emails through to Leah asking if you'd be interested in getting a bunch of these back since you don't offer them anymore. I don't want any money for them, I'd be happy to ship them if you can just cover the postage. The berries I got early this year, before the growth explosion begin, we're unlike anything I tried. I wanted to give you the opportunity to have them before I dispose of them. Please let me know. The order info lists them as *snowbank* variety. Here is info to help you look up my order minus my address of course
-----------------------------------
Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds Shipment Notification - Order #101698997
Thank you for your recent purchase from Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds.
We are pleased to inform you that on 3/27/2019 the following item has been processed.
The following tracking numbers were added to this shipment:
*Deleted for privacy*
Shipped To:
Lisa xxx
xxx
xxx, CT
United States
Ship Method: Standard Shipping (They came UPS)
Blackberry, Snowbank "White" (2 Plants, Ships March-June)
SKU: PL166
Ordered:2 Shipped:2
Sincerely,
Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds
Perhaps you should call the authorities….
Roundup
@@guaporeturns9472 Just the fact that you would recommend that tells me you could care less about the life of all living creatures on this earth especially the insects earthworms and microbial life that are the root of all other life forms. Very very sad
Wow, I never have seen white color berries. I know berries are red, black red. Thank you for your videos.
i bought a variety called polar berry for an experiment...i expected them to not survive in my winter 3B. now that its spring theyre starting to bud up yay
how did they taste?
@@MikeDawson1 taste about the same. With a little bit of lemony citrusy note
I’ve always heard they taste like a typical blackberry but not as sweet . More of a bland sweetness with a black berry flavor .
Are you can make orders to israel?
yes we do! :) but please read our international ordering policy -> International Customers:
The shipping charge for international orders is 20% of the order, with a $5.00 minimum. Processing of International orders may be delayed if your country requires additional documentation. Once your order ships, it could take up to 3-4 weeks to arrive, which we have no control over, as it depends on how long it takes the order to clear customs in your country. International customers are responsible for checking with their local customs office to see what is, and is not permitted to be shipped to their area. We are not responsible, and cannot refund for seeds that are confiscated, destroyed, or returned by customs. You are also responsible for all taxes or customs your country may levy. Due to shipping restrictions, Baker Creek Seed Collections are limited to USA customers only.
We are unable to obtain phytosanitary certificates from the USDA at this time due to our seeds being untreated and untested. The testing needed by a lot of countries requires a large amount of seed, which generally takes the entire lot sent to us by our growers, which means we would have none left to sell.
Flower, garlic and onion bulbs, as well as live plants, cannot be shipped outside of the U.S.