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Gardening with UC Master Gardeners of Inyo & Mono Counties
Inyo-Mono County
Comments:
by Jan Hambleton
on March 12, 2015 at 8:59 AM
Very nice article, Laurie. Do you have specific varieties for Bishop area? Any particuliar varities for patio containers? Thanks.
by Alison Collin
on March 14, 2015 at 8:55 PM
So far the most reliable that we have grown (in Bishop) are Misty (5ft) and Sunshine (4ft.). A specialist catalog recommended them for zones 7-10 as being more tolerant of higher pH than other varieties, hardy to 0 F degrees and needing only 150 chill hours. Like most blueberries they crop better if they are cross pollinated with another variety. These two have certainly held up well but are nowhere near their potiential height. They have produced moderate crops and don't seem to mind the heat while other varieties have sulked, hardly grown and only produced a few sad-looking fruit. O'Neal has also produced reliably but with only small crops. Last year we planted Pink Lemonade and this has grown well and is looking promising, but it is too soon to discover how it will crop. Pearl was planted two years ago, has grown well, and is flowering quite heavily. More people seem to have had failures than successes with blueberries in this area but it is not clear whether it was due to poor choice of variety, or some aspects of the cultural conditions.
by Dustin Blakey
on March 16, 2015 at 8:23 AM
Thanks, Alison and Laurie for the article and input.
by Alison Collin
on March 23, 2015 at 5:12 PM
Jan Hambleton has added the following experiences from her garden in West Bishop: "Chandler" and "Spartan" are not doing well (2nd year), however, "Bountiful Blue", "Top Hat" and "Jubilee," are doing great. Chandler, Spartan and Jubilee are in the same location, Bountiful Blue is closer to Top Hat.
 
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