Pink Popcorn Blueberry
A Cold-Hardy Half-High That Ripens Sweet PINK Berries
Pink Popcorn Blueberry (Vaccinium 'Pink Popcorn') is a fun University of Minnesota introduction with a twist — its berries ripen pink instead of blue, with the same sweet, classic blueberry flavor. It's a hardy half-high with white-pink spring bells and red-orange fall color, making it both a conversation piece and a genuinely productive bush. Give it acidic soil and a second variety for the best crop. Whether you're surprising guests in Edina, filling an edible bed in Maple Grove, or adding novelty fruit in Woodbury — Pink Popcorn brings something different to zone 4b–5a gardens.
Pink Popcorn Blueberry Plant Details
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Vaccinium 'Pink Popcorn' (half-high, U of MN) |
| Plant Type | Deciduous fruiting shrub (half-high blueberry) |
| Mature Height | 3–5 feet |
| Mature Width | 3–4 feet |
| Sun | Full sun (6+ hours) for the best yields and color |
| 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 — berries ripen from white to pink; sweet classic flavor |
| Fall Color | Red-orange foliage |
| Winter Hardiness | Reliable to zone 3 |
Pink Popcorn Blueberry Uses in Minnesota Gardens
Novelty edible
The pink berries are a guaranteed conversation starter and a hit with kids in a Plymouth garden — same great flavor, unexpected color.
Edible landscaping
White-pink spring flowers, pink summer fruit, and red fall foliage make it doubly ornamental in an Eden Prairie bed.
Containers and raised beds
Like all blueberries, it does best in acidic soil — a raised bed or large pot of peat-based mix is the simplest route in the Twin Cities.
Best Time to Plant Pink Popcorn 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 Pink Popcorn Blueberry
- Test and acidify the soil first — blueberries need pH 4.5–5.2. Mix in peat moss and apply elemental sulfur ahead of planting.
- Dig wide, not deep, and backfill with a 50/50 blend of native soil and acidic peat/compost.
- Plant a second variety within a few feet for cross-pollination.
- Set the crown level with the soil and water in well.
- Mulch 3–4 inches with acidic mulch — pine bark, pine needles, or sawdust — kept off the stems.
- Pinch first-year blooms so the plant builds roots before fruiting.
Watering Pink Popcorn 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.
Do the berries really taste like blueberries?
Yes — the flavor is sweet and classic; only the color is different. Let them ripen fully to deep pink for the best taste.
Do I need a second variety for pink berries?
It fruits alone but yields more with a partner. Any zone 3–4 half-high or highbush blooming at the same time works as a pollinator.
Will it survive a Minnesota winter?
Yes — hardy to zone 3. Mulch in-ground plants; protect container roots over winter.
You May Also Like
- Northblue Blueberry — classic dark-blue MN half-high; a good pollination partner
- Chippewa Blueberry — sweet, very hardy half-high
- Saint Cloud Blueberry — early-ripening MN half-high