Experience-Seeds-Knowledge-Plant Discoveries-Ecological Enrichment-Join Now Click Here!

Northern Gooseberry Seeds

500 Seeds, NOGO_S-500 $160.00 Out of stock

currently unavailable Tart-High Energy Fruit-Shade Tolerant-Immune to Blister Rust

Excellent flavored sour native gooseberry with 1/2" dark reddish purple fruit. Best growth in an acidic moist sandy soils in part shade. This selection is from the Western Upper Peninsula in Michigan selected for larger fruit size and full crops. This species gooseberry is much like many of the southern species but the fruit is black instead of green. It is a thorny plant with multiple branches emerging from a center crown. It has much less foliage than Missouri gooseberry and easier to find and pick the fruit. It has so far remained free of all insect and disease damage. The leaves always remain clean of fungus. Mulch with wood chips.

Northern gooseberry is one of the few gooseberries that was extensively collected in the northern regions of the U.S. as it is high in nutrition. Some plants can be completed saturated with fruit found growing under white pine trees. The thorny skins can be processed through a food mill to remove. The fruit can be used for pies, jam and jelly or anything that requires a tart fruit. More needs to be done to find super fruitful selections like the Missouri gooseberry is. It does hybridize but by itself it has such a rich flavor, you would hate to dilute it with something else. It would be good to make syrups out of but the yields need to be improved somewhat. It does best in the northern part of its range. 


 

Plant Specs
Genus & Species Ribes oxyacanthoides var calcicola
Seed Source Michigan's Upper Peninsula originally. Grown in SW Michigan
Hardiness -40F or more
Height (ft) 2
Width (ft) 2
Pollination Requirements Bumblebees. Self fertile.
Soil Sandy loam or sandy rock. Mulch with organic.
Climate Zone 3-6 ideal. Best as a northern plant. Has not been tested much in the south. Grows well in zone 6.
Ease of Cultivation Easy to grow and fruit. Yields are limited so keep vigorous by using blueberry fertilizer. Not a deep shade plant if you want yields. but original plant was growing in shade of firs, maples and white pine. Heavy producing plant in the north. Not as much in southern Michigan as this species is not very vigorous. But it does fruit enough to make you want to grow it for fruit production since the flavor is so good. Likely could be developed to a cultivar level if yields are more reliable. This is true with a lot of gooseberries in general.