Smart Red
Garden Master
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2012
- Messages
- 11,303
- Reaction score
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- Points
- 417
- Location
- South-est, central-est Wisconsin
Welcome, @WildWyandott110. Happy to have you growing with us. I'm in much the same growing zone as you. I consider myself more of a zone 4 than 5 but catalogs have changed my zone without me moving nary an inch in the past 40 years or so.
According to soil maps in my area, I have been growing huge blueberries in a limestone soil for those same 40 years. According to my Master Gardener class instructor, it can't be done. . . and yet..........
If you already have an acidic soil you're on your way to deliciousness in the ground or in a pot, otherwise -- especially if you're planting in a pot -- you can make your soil acidic and 'garden on' with your blueberries.
One tip: you should plant two or three different varieties for best fruiting. Not sure why, but all the catalogs and garden suggestions make that point. Something to do with a need for cross fertilization of those pretty flowers needed to get the berries.
Pleased to meet you and I look forward to becoming gardening friend here on TEG.
According to soil maps in my area, I have been growing huge blueberries in a limestone soil for those same 40 years. According to my Master Gardener class instructor, it can't be done. . . and yet..........
If you already have an acidic soil you're on your way to deliciousness in the ground or in a pot, otherwise -- especially if you're planting in a pot -- you can make your soil acidic and 'garden on' with your blueberries.
One tip: you should plant two or three different varieties for best fruiting. Not sure why, but all the catalogs and garden suggestions make that point. Something to do with a need for cross fertilization of those pretty flowers needed to get the berries.
Pleased to meet you and I look forward to becoming gardening friend here on TEG.