Marla Jones
August 8, 2025
It's winter now and snow all over, so no pic, but this came as a very healthy, beautiful plant.
FrenchieMenchie
June 23, 2025
My mother asked me for a blueberry bush for mothet's day. She received it and said it was delivered with care. It was perfectly fresh and was already starting to grow berries. She loved ot so much that she wanted me to buy her another one. Great nursery to order from. No wilting and sad looking plants from this nursery. Will use again!
Auto
January 18, 2025
Image on the left is how it arrived, images on the right are how it is now. (EDIT: the photos were posted out of order--it arrived as the full and green plant, and now it looks like the dying single-stalk with sparse leaves.)I'm currently in for a degree in horticulture, and have been avidly researching, maintaining, and generally managing plants for some time, one of the reasons I'd been really excited to receive this blueberry bush. (I have a love for indoor fruiting bushes in general, but blueberries are wonderfully beautiful in the fall) I ordered the Pink Icing blueberry, and it arrived a decent time after I ordered, looking...somewhat strange right off the bat.The stem blight was mildly apparent when I first got it (as was some leaf rust, which is already bad), but I wrote it off as wintering damage (which can happen, and it was early in the year--though the patchy top-down crumbling leaves and red-black-pockmarked stems were concerning, I decided to wait and see whether it was wintering damage or blight) and did my best to keep a pristine indoor environment (as this is advertised as a plant that does perfectly fine indoors) *with* additional full spectrum grow lights and routine checks to make sure it was getting enough sun, just in case. However, over the months I had it, the damage to the stems and leaves had quickly grown, and at the moment has consumed roughly 80-85% of the plant in dead stems and leaves.I did everything I could to save it--carefully and quickly cut off all infected stems to try and keep blight away from healthy ones, making sure the areas were clean and well covered after the fact to prevent spread of the fungus, and made sure that the water levels, humidity levels, and temperature were all perfect. This did not stop the blight. It enveloped nearly every single stem in a matter of months, leaving only a single stem, with blight slowly crawling in a flank from the bottom and from the top toward the remaining green in the middle of the stem.I am very disappointed and frustrated as there is nothing I can do to save this plant now, and I've done a LOT to try and curb this awful blight. This is something that *should* be spotted and culled before it's sent out, especially by a company who exclusively sells fruiting plants as a product. (And especially considering I have no idea how many other plants have been infected by this!) There is nothing more incredibly heartbreaking than seeing your flowering blueberry bush die in front of your eyes, and nothing you can do will save it. It becomes a seriously contagious biohazard to other plants, causing damage from airborne/waterborne spores released by cutting off the infected branches, which makes this an incredibly irresponsible oversight on the part of the company.Very sad and disappointed, down one blueberry bush. I'm not keen on ordering from them again unless I am absolutely sure that there is NO blight infecting any of their bushes, at all. Please be careful with your plants if you do order and make absolutely certain that they aren't infected with stem blight--it WILL destroy your plant if you can't catch it fast enough. (And even then, good luck.)