Monday, January 9, 2017

Re: [nafex] blueberries at high pH

@Alan: This is very interesting. How can one add sufficient levels of
magnesium to the soil? Epsom salt? Also, this is an idea: if pH is not
the real issue, and the absence of enough Mg is, why can't one add Dolomite
limestone to the soil for blueberries; higher pH and higher Mg would result.

@everyone: There are two varieties of northern high-bush bluery (V.
corymbosum) that I know of that can take more typical garden soil (clay,
higher pH)...

1. Jersey
2. Hardiblue

I think Reka too, and just read about one called Sunshine[something]. Does
anyone know any others.

On Mon, Jan 9, 2017 at 8:08 AM, Alan Haigh <alandhaigh@gmail.com> wrote:

> They?ll grow just fine in
> a high pH soil if they have sufficient magnesium and lots of organic
> matter. I?ve seen huge blueberry harvests on high pH soils."
>
> Once again, no actual numbers, so depends on what you mean by high pH. I
> have very productive blueberries in soil with the upper 8" of soil profile
> in the mid 6.s, but with about 5.6 below. Mulched soil, over time, swings
> towards neutral if you are starting in normal blueberry range. Most acid
> loving plants only need a percentage of their soil profile to be at a range
> where any given nutrients are readily available. Somehow, highbush
> northern blueberries must have ready access to free iron, apparently.
>
> Rabbiteye blueberries have different needs and can thrive in more alkaline
> soils, but there is supposedly some range of adaptability even between
> various northern highbush cultivars.
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