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The Berry Grower

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The Berry Grower is an innovative guide for small-scale growing and marketing of organic fruits and berries. Covers planning and strategy, organic soil care, profiles of profitable small fruits, cu...
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  • 14 June 2022
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Grow Berries that Thrive—At Home, in your Market Garden, or on your Small Farm
Unlock the secrets to profitable, sustainable, and innovative berry growing. From backyard plots to market gardens, The Berry Grower equips you to grow organic small fruits successfully in any setting.

What You'll Learn
Whether you're a beginner or experienced grower, this guide gives you practical strategies, expert insights, and hands-on knowledge to produce high-quality fruit that sells or feeds your family. You'll discover how to:

  • Plan and manage your orchard or berry patch for efficiency and profit
  • Cultivate a wide range of fruits including raspberries, blackberries, strawberries, currants, gooseberries, figs, and lesser-known but high-value varieties
  • Optimize soil fertility, manage weeds naturally, and control pests organically
  • Adapt to climate change, drought, and extreme weather with resilient growing methods
  • Harvest, handle, and pack fruit professionally for the market or CSA
  • Diversify products beyond fresh fruit for increased revenue and market stability
  • Learn from interviews with successful small-scale growers and market gardeners across the US.

Why This Book Works for You
Blake Cothron draws on over 20 years of experience as an organic farmer, nursery operator, educator, and speaker. His expertise makes complex concepts approachable, whether you're planning your first backyard patch or expanding a small-scale farm.

Praise from Experts
"Blake covers everything from soup to nuts, figuratively, in growing these fruits in various settings, for home use or markets. A number of the fruits he mentions are not yet well-known, but are worth growing."
― Lee Reich, PhD, author of Growing Figs in Cold Climates and The Ever Curious Gardener

Start Growing your Future
Today From self-sufficiency at home to profitable small fruit production for local markets, The Berry Grower provides everything you need to turn soil into success. Pick up your copy and begin growing your best berries yet.

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Price: $39.99
Pages: 336
Publisher: New Society Publishers
Imprint: New Society Publishers
Publication Date: 14 June 2022
Trim Size: 8.88 X 7.50 in
ISBN: 9780865719651
Format: Paperback
BISACs: TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Agriculture / Organic, Organic farming, GARDENING / Fruit, SCIENCE / Life Sciences / Horticulture, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Small Business, Gardening: fruit & vegetable, Botany & plant sciences, Small businesses & self-employment
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"Whether you're looking to grow for your family, or for production (or anywhere in between), this resource is absolutely stacked with actionable insights that you can utilize. Blake has done an amazing job at compiling an enormous amount of information into an easy to follow resource that anyone can use."
Rob Avis, PEng, co-author, Building Your Permaculture Property and Essential Rainwater Harvesting

"Blake covers everything from soup to nuts, figuratively, in growing these fruits in various settings, for home use or markets. A number of the fruits he mentions are not yet well-known, but are worth growing."
Lee Reich, PhD, author, Growing Figs in Cold Climates and The Ever Curious Gardener

"The Berry Grower is a terrific resource for anyone getting into small fruit production or those looking to diversify their crops. It is loaded with helpful background, tips, tricks, and recommendations that will benefit small fruit growers of any scale or level of experience!"
Dan Dalton, PASA Sustainable Agriculture

"Blake uses 20 years' experience growing berries and other small fruits to provide valuable practical, effective, up-to-date information (including addressing climate chaos) to encourage more localized and resilient organic food production, garden by garden."
Pam Dawling, author, The Year-Round Hoophouse and Sustainable Market Farming

"I've cracked open your book and like what I'm seeing so far!"
— The late, great Michael Phillips, author, The Holistic Orchard and The Apple Grower

Blake Cothron is an organic farmer, nurseryman, writer, musician, and speaker, with over 20 years' experience in organic agriculture, botany, horticulture, and growing food. He is the co-owner and co-operator of Peaceful Heritage Nursery, a 4-acre USDA Certified Organic research farm, orchard, and edible plant nursery. Author of Pawpaws: The Complete Growing and Marketing Guide, he has also written for Permaculture Design magazine and various online publications. Blake has an educational blog and YouTube channel devoted to fruit growing, and he is an educator with the Organic Association of Kentucky. He divides his time between farming, research, writing, beekeeping, gardening, travel, yoga, meditation, and being a husband and father in beautiful Kentucky.

Preface

PART 1: THE BASICS
1. Why Small Scale, Small Fruits?

— Why small fruit growing? — How and where to start? — Understanding current climate challenges — Small fruits to the rescue — Why micro fruit farming? — Limitations of small fruit growing — Maximize profits by being the workforce— The future of small and micro farming

2. 21st Century Strategic Planning
— Planning it out — How to research — Evaluating agricultural profit forecasts — Understanding your bioregion and regional climate — Choosing cultivars — How many plants?— Pollination

3. Sourcing Plants and Navigating the 21st Century Nursery Scene
— Sourcing plants and plant material — Sources to avoid — Organic or conventional? — Navigating the nursery scene — Quality nurseries

4. Creating Beds
— Creating space for small fruits to thrive — Mechanical tillage — No-till options — Spacing — Managing walkways — Stale bedding — Planting the beds — Planting in rows— Cover cropping

5. Managing Soil Fertility Organically
— Practical considerations — Soluble and insoluble organic fertilizers — Animal-product based fertilizers — Vegan plant-based fertilizers — Mineral fertilizers — Compost and manures — Consider the impacts — Applying organic fertilizers— Unlocking latent soil fertility

6. Planting Successfully
— Handling and inspecting nursery stock — Storing dormant plants — Effectively handling cuttings — Pre-planting preparations — Proper planting practices— Post-planting care

7. Organic Weed Management
— Using permanent grass cover — Mulch — Landscape fabric — Flame weeding — Plant Guilds

8. Tools of the Trade

9. Maintenance, Protection, and Organic Pest Control
— Integrated Pest Management (IPM) — Insect management — Common animal pests — Frost protection

PART 2: GETTING TO KNOW YOUR FRUIT ALLIES
10. Blackberries
— Types of modern blackberries — Site considerations — Cultivation — Fertilizing — Mulch and irrigation — Pests/Diseases/Challenges — Harvest — Marketing— Recommended cultivars

11. Blueberries
— Species — Cultivation — Planting — Weed control — Irrigation — Pruning — Pests/Diseases/Challenges — Cultivars (by region)— Harvesting and marketing

12. Raspberries
— Species — Cultivation — Irrigation — Pruning — Thinning — Trellising — Mulch— Propagation — Pests/Diseases/Challenges — Marketing— Cultivars

13. Strawberries
— Cultivation — Growing Methods — Thinning — Planting — Irrigation — Harvesting — Marketing — Pests/Diseases/Challenges— Cultivars

14. Juneberries
— Cultivation — Best species by region — Irrigation — Pests/Diseases/Challenges — Marketing— Cultivars

15. Muscadine Grapes
— Cultivation — Irrigation — Pollination — Pests and diseases — Marketing— Cultivars

16. Mulberries
— Species of mulberries — Cultivation — Irrigation — Potential for commercial production — Harvesting — Pests/Diseases/Challenges — Marketing— The future of mulberries— Recommended cultivars

17. Gooseberries
— Cultivation — Irrigation — Pests and diseases — Harvesting — Marketing— Recommended cultivars

18. Currants
— Cultivation — Irrigation — Pests and diseases — Harvesting — Marketing— Cultivars

19. Figs
— Cultivation — Cold region (USDA zones 5–7) — Understanding high tunnel fig growing — Warm region (USDA zones 8–10) — Harvesting
— Marketing — Pests and diseases— Cultivars

20. Tomatoes
— Cultivation — Pests and diseases — Irrigation — Marketing— Cultivars

21. Other Small Fruits Worthy of Consideration ...Or Not
— Aronia (Aronia melanocarpa) — Autumn Olive (Elaeagnus umbellata) and Goumi (Elaeagnus multiflora) — Bush and Nanking Cherries
— Kiwiberry (Actinidia arguta) — Cactus Fruits — Cornelian Cherry (Cornus mas) — Hardy Passionfruit (Passiflora incarnata) — Elderberry (Sambucus canadensis) — Feijoa (Acca sellowiana) — Goji (Lycium barbarum) — Hybrid Cane Berries — Rosehips — Seaberry/sea buckthorn(Hippophae rhamnoides) — Munson Grapes — Che (Maclura tricuspidata) — Honeyberry (Lonicera caerulea)

PART 3: HARVESTING, MARKETING, AND THE FUTURE
22. Harvesting and Post-Harvesting
— Harvest efficiency— Protecting, storing, and chilling

23. Market Planning and Strategies
— Direct marketing methods

24. The Future of Small Fruit Growing
— Climate change and fruit growing— Rescuing the genetic pool by selecting your own local cultivars

25. Interviews with Successful Small Fruit Market Growers

26. Conclusion

Appendix: Jivamritam
Notes
Resources
Index
About the Author
About New Society Publishers