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A Typical Bunch of Our Blackberries
The
Doyle’s Thornless Blackberry™ is not new at all, ours is 40 years
old, older than most Thornless blackberry plants sold today.
The original plant is still producing gallons and gallons
of sweet juicy berries!
There
are many new Thornless blackberries on the market but there
are none that compares with this one, not even one!
The
other varieties only produce about 1 to 2 quarts per plant,
but you already knew that, didn’t you? Others cannot grow
in all frost zones 3 to 10, but this one can and does. It
is now growing in all 50 states and Canada. We have also
sent plants to South America and Africa.
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Before
one can truly understand the
Doyle’s Thornless Blackberry™ it
is necessary to understand the ordinary berries, and maybe
you have some of them now.
.
Basket
after Basket—Yummy
Nearly
all popular varieties yield far less than the this variety.
The average is about 1 to 2 quarts per plant. Some may produce
a gallon, which is not even close to the our production.
This amazing plant yields 10 to 20 gallons per plant, that’s
1 to 2 bushels! Many dwarf fruit trees don’t produce this
much volume.
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How
would you like a blackberry that doubles as an ornamental?
Well, now you can! Because the bunches of berries are so
huge, the flowers are too! We think they look like Pom-Poms.

You can grow the
Doyle’s Thornless Blackberry™ on a 7 foot trellis,
as shown in our video, producing a tall massive bush covered
with blooms, and later dozens and dozens of huge bunches
of sweet, juicy blackberries.
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Using
ordinary blackberries, one would need to plant at least
30 to even come close to the amazing
Doyle’s Thornless
Blackberry's™ production. That many
plants take up a lot of garden or yard space and will cost
$30 to $50.
One
of our plants growing on a 7 foot trellis requires only about
9 square feet. It can even be grown in large containers
for patio use,.
A
bare root plant needs two to four weeks to re-root
itself. Don't pronounce it dead till it has time to
root. Production is slow in the first year
because it is establishing itself. The 3rd year is
when you will see the best production, producing large, sweet
and juicy berries. Some have gotten 3 gallons the first
year. That however, is not usual but it can be done with
care and good weather.
It’s
outrageously tasty to go out in the morning to pick a large
bowl of berries for your cereal or just eat them fresh with
cream.
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LOOK
AT THIS:
-
Thornless
- 10 to 20 gallons
of berries per plant
- (that’s about
1 to 2 bushels per plant)
- Fruit is in large
bunches with 40 to 100 berries
- All 50 states,
zones 3—10
- Bears over a
4 to 6 week period
- Large, sweet,
juicy berries.
- Is in the Agriculture
Hall of Fame
- Doubles as an
ornamental
- No disease reported
ever!
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