With over 300 strawberry plants, over 50 raspberry vines, roughly 20 blueberry bushes, plus at least another dozen or so other kinds of berry plants in my yard, I do a whole lot of berry picking. In other words, I get a whole lot of practice and plenty of time trying to figure out how to do it well.
Of the many different things to put picked berries in, my favorite is a milk jug with the top corner cut-off.
It is cheap, light, easy to wash, and has a good handle, so is easy to keep a hold of while crawling around berry bushes. I like using the half gallon jugs for my kids and the gallon jugs are about the right size for adults. Once the berry season is over, simply recycle or dispose of the jug, so it doesn’t have to sit around the rest of the year.
These are some things I have found helpful for me:
While picking berries from your own yard, try to weed under the berry bushes. This not only makes it easier to spot future berries, but draws your attention down low, where ripe swollen berries often hide.
Get to know your berry plants. For example, I last counted 5 different kinds of strawberry plants in my yard, each tends to ripen berries a little differently, with some being totally ripe when a nice dark red and others being totally ripe when mostly red, but never reaching a dark red color. I even have some that are ripe when an off white color. I taste some of the berries as I pick to get a sense of how ripe they are, as a sort of quality testing. My kids seem to do the tasting naturally, while I’ve at times have gotten so caught up with getting the chore of picking done that I have forgotten to do likewise, only to discover later that the berries weren’t quite as ripe as I thought they were.
Be sure to pick up leaves, branches, vines, and look under. In many cases ripe berries are heavy and cause things to droop, which can make them more hidden in grass, under leaves, and so on. Typically, if I see one ripe berry it is a sign that there are more in that area that are hidden.
Wash and soak the berries in water after picking them. It is best to have someone in the family that is not squeamish do this, since it is not uncommon for previously unseen bugs to appear once the berries are submerged for awhile under water. If you don’t mind extra protein with your berries, feel free to skip this. Personally, I prefer more bug free berries.
If freezing berries, most do best by being initially frozen on a cookie sheet before being put in freezer bags. That way they aren’t all frozen in a giant chunk of berry ice when you are ready to use them. Blueberries and huckleberries can skip this step since they naturally don’t stick together when frozen.
I’d love to hear any berry picking tips that work for you as well.
Jun 21, 2007 | 2:18 PM PST
WOW!!! wish I had that many berries....we only have enough blackberries that my 20 month old gets a fresh handfull for breakfast each morning. This is really the first year that my black berry has produced anything of signifigance. I have never cut it back, but read that I should cut it down to the ground each year? any thoughts on this?
Jun 21, 2007 | 2:27 PM PST
If I remember correctly, blackberries are biannual, meaning the vines live for two years, like raspberries. I'd definitely recommend cutting out old dead vines so it doesn't become an unnmanageable bramble.
Blackberries are the bane of my gardening existence. Here in the Seattle area they are invasive. I am planning on writing about them tomorrow.
Jun 21, 2007 | 2:47 PM PST
thanks! I just cut back some of it today to make it more of a vine and less of a bramble. luckily here, they are not invasive, and the berries are yummy!
Jun 21, 2007 | 4:54 PM PST
Thanks for posting these tips! I will keep in mind the washing bit for sure :) I would love to add blueberries & strawberries to my garden; do you think they will do well in containers? What do you do for pest control? Thanks!
Jun 22, 2007 | 9:04 AM PST
I've seen others successfully grow both strawberries and blueberries in containers. For blueberries you would probably want to look for the miniature kinds, like Top Hat.
The only pests I really worry about when it comes to most berries are critters (birds, raccoons, squirrels, etc.). I have a dog that is very serious about her job of protecting our yard from all the possible invaders.