Northblue Blueberry (Vaccinium) — Plymouth, MN

Northblue Blueberry

#1 Gallon
$16.99
Sale price  $16.99 Regular price  $20.99
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Northblue Blueberry (Vaccinium) — Plymouth, MN

Northblue Blueberry

$16.99
Sale price  $16.99 Regular price  $20.99
Size#1 Gallon
🌸 Spring Sale — Save up to 18% on every plant
🚚Free delivery over $200
🌲Grown in Minnesota
🌱Pro installation available upon request
📞Questions? Text 612-214-1955
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Locally Owned
Twin Cities, MN
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100% MN-Hardy
Every plant proven in zone 4

Large, Dark, Flavorful Berries on a Compact Minnesota Half-High

Northblue Blueberry (Vaccinium 'Northblue') is a University of Minnesota half-high bred for cold-climate gardens — a compact, ornamental bush that yields large, dark blue, full-flavored berries and turns brilliant red in fall. Its small size and zone 3 hardiness make it one of the easiest blueberries for Twin Cities yards, in the ground or in a big pot. Give it acidic soil and a second variety for the best crop. Whether you're starting a berry patch in Edina, filling a raised bed in Maple Grove, or adding an edible accent in Woodbury — Northblue delivers homegrown blueberries to zone 4b–5a (and colder) gardens.

Northblue Blueberry Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Vaccinium 'Northblue' (half-high, U of MN)
Plant Type Deciduous fruiting shrub (half-high blueberry)
Mature Height 2–3 feet
Mature Width 2–3 feet
Sun Full sun (6+ hours) for the best yields and sweetness
Water Moderate to high — 1–2 inches per week; shallow roots need steady moisture
USDA Zones 3–7 (Twin Cities is zone 4b–5a)
Soil Acidic, pH 4.5–5.2 — essential. Most Minnesota soils are too alkaline; amend heavily with peat and elemental sulfur.
Pollination Self-fertile but yields far better with a second blueberry variety nearby
Harvest Midseason — mid-summer; large, dark, flavorful berries
Fall Color Brilliant red foliage — genuinely ornamental
Winter Hardiness Reliable to zone 3 — excellent winter survival, good snow-cover protection from its low habit

Northblue Blueberry Uses in Minnesota Gardens

Compact berry patch

Its small footprint lets you fit several plants for cross-pollination in a tight Plymouth garden — pair Northblue with another half-high.

Edible landscaping and edging

Low and tidy with standout red fall color, it works as an edible edging or front-of-border shrub in Eden Prairie.

Containers

Northblue's compact size makes it one of the best blueberries for a large container of acidic mix — a practical way to grow blueberries over our alkaline Twin Cities soils.

Best Time to Plant Northblue Blueberry in Minnesota

Spring (late April–May) is the best window, giving the shrub a full season to establish. Early fall planting can work in a sheltered spot, but spring is safer. Never plant after mid-October.

How to Plant Northblue Blueberry

  1. Test and acidify the soil first — blueberries need pH 4.5–5.2. Mix in peat moss and apply elemental sulfur ahead of planting.
  2. Dig wide, not deep, and backfill with a 50/50 blend of native soil and acidic peat/compost.
  3. Plant a second variety within a few feet for cross-pollination.
  4. Set the crown level with the soil and water in well.
  5. Mulch 3–4 inches with acidic mulch — pine bark, pine needles, or sawdust — kept off the stems.
  6. Pinch first-year blooms so the plant builds roots before fruiting.

Watering Northblue Blueberry in Minnesota

First Year Watering Schedule

  • Weeks 1–2: Every 1–2 days, deep and slow
  • Month 1–2: Every 3–4 days
  • Month 3–6: 1–2 inches per week; blueberries have shallow roots and dislike drying out
  • Stop watering 2–3 weeks before ground freeze (typically late October in the Twin Cities).

After Year One

Keep soil consistently moist, especially during fruit set and ripening. Use rainwater if your tap water is alkaline, since hard water gradually raises soil pH.

Is Northblue a good container blueberry?

One of the best — its compact size and hardiness suit a large pot of acidic mix, which sidesteps Minnesota's alkaline soils entirely. Protect potted roots over winter.

Do I need a second variety?

It fruits alone but yields more with a partner. Pair Northblue with Chippewa, St. Cloud, or Northcountry for overlapping bloom.

Will it survive a Minnesota winter?

Yes — hardy to zone 3, and its low habit catches insulating snow. In-ground plants need only a good mulch; protect container roots.

You May Also Like

  • Chippewa Blueberry — sweet MN half-high; a great pollination partner
  • Northcountry Blueberry — very hardy, mild-sweet half-high
  • Pink Popcorn Blueberry — a novel pink-fruited MN half-high

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