Berries, Brambles & Vines
Full care guide for KC berry growers — blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, blackberries, grapes, and currants. Month-by-month tasks, KC-proven varieties, and the soil science behind growing them right.
KC Blueberry Warning: Soil pH is Everything
Kansas City soil runs neutral to slightly alkaline — pH 7.0–7.5 due to our limestone bedrock. Blueberries need pH 4.5–5.5 to absorb nutrients. Plant them in our native soil without amending and they'll slowly starve regardless of how much you fertilize.
Plan 6–12 months ahead. Work elemental sulfur into dedicated beds the fall before planting. Ongoing: acidic fertilizer every spring, fresh pine bark mulch 4–6" deep annually. A healthy, properly-sited blueberry bush produces for 20+ years.
Season at a Glance
What each berry needs month by month — now through dormancy.
| Berry | Jan | Feb | Mar ← | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🫐 Blueberry | ||||||||||||
| 🍓 Strawberry | ||||||||||||
| 🍇 Raspberry | ||||||||||||
| 🫐 Blackberry | ||||||||||||
| 🍇 Grape | ||||||||||||
| 🍓 Currant |
March column highlighted — current month for Zone 6a, Kansas City.
March is the most important pruning month for berries in KC. Raspberries, blackberries, gooseberries, and grapes all need to be pruned before bud swell. For grapes especially — prune NOW or miss the window entirely. Blueberries should have had their heaviest pruning in January–February, but light cleanup is still appropriate this month.
Month-by-Month for Each Berry
KC-proven varieties, care notes, and what to do every season.
- Bluecrop — mid-season, the industry standard, reliable and productive in KC
- Blueray — large berries, great flavor, very productive; pairs perfectly with Bluecrop
- Duke — earliest ripening highbush, mild flavor, consistently reliable
- Elliott — late-season, extends harvest into August, very cold-hardy
- Patriot — cold-hardiest highbush, good for exposed sites, early–mid season
- Earliglow — earliest June-bearer, exceptional old-fashioned flavor, disease resistant
- Allstar — large, firm, excellent flavor, very reliable in KC heat and humidity
- Jewel — the mid-season standard, large berries, holds up in KC summers
- Seascape — best everbearing for KC, produces spring through fall frosts
- Albion — premium everbearing, firm fruit, outstanding flavor all season
- Heritage — fall-bearing classic, prolific, the most reliable raspberry for KC
- Caroline — fall-bearing, large flavorful berries, outproduces Heritage
- Canby — summer-bearing, nearly thornless, excellent flavor, very productive
- Anne — golden/yellow fall-bearer, sweet mild flavor, stunning and delicious
- Killarney — summer-bearing red, very cold-hardy, excellent for jam
- Triple Crown — the gold standard thornless, massive sweet berries, extremely productive
- Chester — most cold-hardy thornless, reliable producer, great flavor
- Natchez — erect thornless, earliest ripening, very large berries, impressive yields
- Ouachita — erect thornless, long harvest season, handles KC humidity well
- Von — semi-erect, exceptionally sweet, one of the best flavors of any blackberry
- Concord — the KC classic, grows anywhere, full-flavored blue grape, great for juice & jam
- Niagara — white/green Concord-type, sweet and aromatic, very productive
- Marquette — wine grape, cold-hardy to -30°F, excellent red wine, disease resistant
- Frontenac — French-American hybrid wine grape, very productive, cold-hardy
- Reliance — seedless table grape, sweet pink flesh, more cold-hardy than most seedless
- Consort (Black Currant) — most cold-hardy black currant, white pine blister rust immune
- Ben Sarek (Black Currant) — compact dwarf plant, huge berries, excellent flavor
- Red Lake (Red Currant) — classic red currant, large clusters, great for jelly
- Pixwell (Gooseberry) — nearly thornless, pink when ripe, very reliable in KC
- Invicta (Gooseberry) — high yielding, mildew resistant, large pale green fruits
Berry Spray Calendar
Preventive sprays for KC's most common berry problems — timed to the season.
Berry Grower's Supply List
Items worth stocking now — before you need them urgently in April or May.
Ammonium sulfate or Hollytone · Pine bark mulch (acid) · Elemental sulfur · Bird netting · Soil pH meter or test kit
Straw bales (mulching after freeze) · Balanced fertilizer · Row cover for frost protection · Slug bait
2-wire trellis system · Balanced fertilizer · Pine straw mulch · Sharp pruning shears · Bird netting
Copper fungicide or Mancozeb · Sulfur dust/spray · Strong trellis or arbor · Pruning saw · Refractometer (optional, wine grapes)
Most KC-area berry plants can be sourced locally at Suburban Lawn & Garden or ordered from Stark Bro's (Missouri nursery, ships bare-root in March–April). For blueberries, buying 2–3 varieties that ripen at different times extends your harvest from June through August with the same effort.