I love blueberries. I live in Michigan and there are plenty of places that grow blueberries commercially. Naturally, I planted a dozen plants of three different varieties so I could grow my own. They all languished for two years. One after another died. I have grown a pretty successful garden for 30 years, so I have some skill with plants, but this stumped me. Prior to planting, the soil was amended with 1/3 peat moss for the acidity, 1/3
compost and 1/3
native soil. Never looked good. Failure to thrive. Chlorotic. They got watered regularly the first season. I added some soil acidifier at the beginning of the second season. They got a couple dressings with compost. They still looked very sad.
Finally I gave up and ripped them out.
Put in Honeyberry instead. There are various vendors, but I got the new sweeter varieties that originate from University of Saskatchewan. Planted them two weeks ago in the same spots as the removed blueberries. Soil amended with, basically, Mell's mix. 1/3 peat moss, 1/3 compost, 1/3 soil. POW! Took off like gangbusters pumping out new leaves faster than the blueberries ever did.
Curiously, I had two blueberries that were still alive. Sad, but alive. I transplanted them about 20 feet further south. They were on the flat part of my front
yard. After the move they are on the steep bank that fronts the highway. I planted them in a trench on contour and backfilled with more Mel's mix. POW, they greened up and took off. Very odd...
So if you're struggling with blueberries, try something different, and perhaps less fussy about soil type.
I got mine from:
http://www.honeyberryusa.com/about-honeyberry.html
I have no relationship to them, blah blah blah.
Glad to see something thriving in that spot.
Finest regards,
troy