Marionberry
Marionberry
Zone compatibility details
Understanding the Prices on Our Product Pages
When shopping on our site, you might notice different types of prices listed for products. Here’s a quick guide to help you understand what each price means:
- Regular Price: The price before any discounts, typically reflecting the median price from the past 90 to 180 days, excluding special promotions and clearance events.
- Now Price: The updated price of an item after a reduction from the regular price. Now Prices are often limited to a short time frame and offer the opportunity to save.
- MSRP: Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price, provided by the manufacturer as a benchmark to highlight the value of our current pricing.
- Discount Exempt: Products labeled discount exempt are not eligible for discounts or promotional offers.
Please note that product prices are subject to change without notice.
Couldn't load pickup availability
Your ZIP code ✎
Zone compatibility details
This variety’s zone range
—
My hardiness zone
—
The USDA hardiness zones offer a guide to varieties that will grow well in certain climates. Each zone corresponds to the minimum winter temperatures experienced in a given area. Make sure that your hardiness zone lies within the zone compatibility range of this variety before ordering.
Spring Shipping Schedule
Spring Shipping Schedule and Zone Opening Earliest Ship Dates
Note: At Park Seed, we are committed to shipping healthy live plants at the ideal planting time for your zone. In order to ensure our plants are shipped at the optimal conditions, we regularly adjust our shipping timeframes as needed. The below table reflects our current estimate of timing for rose, live plant and bulb shipping this season.
| Zone | Bareroot Roses | Container Roses | Plants & Bulbs | Sweet Potato & Avocado | Citrus | Blooming Blocks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-3 | Early-Mid May | Mid May | Mid May | Late May-Mid June | Early-Mid May | Early-Mid May |
| 4-5 | Early-Mid Apr | Late Apr-Early May | Late Apr-Early May | Mid-Late May | Late Apr-Early May | Early-Mid May |
| 6 | Mid-Late Mar | Mid-Late Apr | Mid-Late Apr | Early-Mid May | Early-Mid Apr | Early-Mid May |
| 7 | Early-Mid Mar | Mid-Late Apr | Late Mar-Early Apr | Late Apr-Mid May | Early-Mid Apr | Early-Mid May |
| 8 | Mid-Late Feb | Mid-Late Apr | Late Mar-Early Apr | Mid-Late Apr | Early-Mid Apr | Early-Mid May |
| 9-13* | Late Jan-Mid Feb | Mid-Late Apr | Late Mar-Early Apr | Mid-Late Apr | Early-Mid Apr | Early-Mid May |

Grow Zone
6 - 9
Mature Height
72
Mature Width
36
Sun / Shade
Full Sun
Bloom Size
need bloom size meta
Tomato Fruit Set
Days To Maturity
Fruit Weight
Soil Tolerance
Normal, loamy
Moisture
Moist, well-drained
Description / Marionberry
You don't have to live in Oregon to grow Marionberries! This gourmet blackberry cultivar is a snap to grow in temperate and warm climates, and the berries are so delicious. You need only one shrub (it's self-pollinating), so you can work it into even a crowded sunny garden spot. Marionberry is a national treasure, and it's time for you to enjoy its scrumptious flavor!
A cross of two blackberry cultivars (Chehalem and Olallie) developed by the USDA and Oregon State University more than 60 years ago, Marionberry is the perfect blend of flavors, size, and high yields. These dark purple berries have a frosty cast (very appealing on a hot summer day in the garden!) and are bursting with flavor. They make excellent preserves of all kinds -- jams, jellies, compotes -- and are superb in pies and other baked treats. Of course, you may just want to gobble them down right off the vine; that works well, too.
This plant is shrubby, with a central leader and numerous side shoots, all loaded with berries. You'll see the first nubby little berries in late spring, and by midsummer they will be ripening magnificently. After the harvest, prune the shrub back severely. There -- your work is done!
Marionberry (it's named for Marion County, Oregon, where it was developed) thrives in mild climates. The majority of commercial marionberries are grown in Oregon. But as long as you have enriched, loamy soil with plenty of sunshine, you can grow Marionberry successfully in hardiness zones 6 through 9. Prune it back annually and it will reach just 2 to 3 feet wide and about 6 feet high. A lot of disease resistance and vigor have been grown into this blackberry, and you'll love how tough it is when environmental challenges arise.
Add Marionberry to your sunny garden this season, and you'll soon be speaking the lingo of the Oregonians, who call it "the Cabernet of blackberries"!
Product Details
SKU: 38435
Genus: Rubus
Species: 'Marion'
Item Form: 1-Quart
Foliage Color: Dark Green
Habit: Vining
Light Requirements: Full Sun
Moisture Requirements: Moist, well-drained
Soil Type: Normal, loamy
Uses:- Beds
- Border
- Cuisine
- Containers
- Berries
- Bird Lovers
- Bloom First Year
- Butterfly Lovers
- Easy Care Plants
- Edible
- Fast Growing
- Free Bloomer
- Heirloom
- Pruning Recommended
- Trellises
State Shipping Restrictions: GU, HI, ID, PR, VI, WI