CYBER SALE! Canada: Canada Post orders delayed due to postal strike. For immediate shipping choose courier option at checkout | USA: No delays | International: See details here

UPS shipping available at checkout for immediate shipping! Canada Post shipping option still available, though delayed.

Canada Post CUPW announces national strike

For our Canadian customers:

We have made UPS shipping available for any orders that you wish to receive quickly. Rates are available at checkout.

During the strike we are still accepting orders for Canada Post shipping, and preparing them for shipping. They will be put into the Postal System as soon as possible. Since Canada Post will be delivering on a first-in, first-out basis, your order will be ready to go. 

Here is some of the information that Canada Post has provided:

Mail and parcels will not be processed or delivered for the duration of the national strike, and some post offices will be closed. Service guarantees will be impacted for items already in the postal network. And no new items will be accepted until the national disruption is over.

All mail and parcels in the postal network will be secured and delivered as quickly as possible on a first-in, first-out basis once operations resume. 

For our USA customers: There are no delays to our standard shipping times. 

International customers (outside of North America): UPS courier shipping has no delays. A Canada Post option is available but will have delays due to the Postal strike. Canada Post orders are shipped on a first-in, first-out basis once mail services resume.

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Rubus ursinus
CALIFORNIA TRAILING PACIFIC BLACKBERRY

SKU: 1539-5
Regular price 5.99 4.19 1.80 off
Unit price
per

Rubus ursinus is a North American species of blackberry or dewberry, known by the common names California blackberry, California dewberry, Douglas berry, Pacific blackberry, Pacific dewberry and trailing blackberry. The plant is native to western North America, found mainly in British Columbia (Canada); California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington (Western U.S.); and Baja California state (Mexico).

The plant is cultivated for its fruit, and also ornamental plant qualities. It is planted in home, native plant, and wildlife gardens, and in natural landscaping projects. It can be espaliered or trained on fences and trellising.

The flowers are white with narrower petals than most related species, and are fragrant. The sweet, very aromatic, edible fruits are dark purple, dark red, or black and up to 2 centimetres (3/4 inch) in length.

Diverse wildlife eat the berries, including songbirds, deer, bear, and other large and small mammals. It is of notable pollinator and nesting material value for native bee and bumble bee species. This blackberry species is a larval food source for Papilio rutulus (the western tiger swallowtail butterfly), Nymphalis antiopa (the mourning cloak butterfly), Strymon melinus (the gray hairstreak butterfly), and Celastrina ladon (the spring azure butterfly).

Native Americans such as the Kumeyaay, Maidu, Pomo and Salish peoples used R. ursinus as a fresh and dried fruit source.

Type: Hardy shrub

Location: Sun or part sun

Hardiness zones: 3-9

Seeds per packet: 10

Sale

Rubus ursinus
CALIFORNIA TRAILING PACIFIC BLACKBERRY

SKU: 1539-5
Regular price 5.99 4.19 1.80 off
Unit price
per
Availability
 
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Shipping calculated at checkout.
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Rubus ursinus is a North American species of blackberry or dewberry, known by the common names California blackberry, California dewberry, Douglas berry, Pacific blackberry, Pacific dewberry and trailing blackberry. The plant is native to western North America, found mainly in British Columbia (Canada); California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington (Western U.S.); and Baja California state (Mexico).

The plant is cultivated for its fruit, and also ornamental plant qualities. It is planted in home, native plant, and wildlife gardens, and in natural landscaping projects. It can be espaliered or trained on fences and trellising.

The flowers are white with narrower petals than most related species, and are fragrant. The sweet, very aromatic, edible fruits are dark purple, dark red, or black and up to 2 centimetres (3/4 inch) in length.

Diverse wildlife eat the berries, including songbirds, deer, bear, and other large and small mammals. It is of notable pollinator and nesting material value for native bee and bumble bee species. This blackberry species is a larval food source for Papilio rutulus (the western tiger swallowtail butterfly), Nymphalis antiopa (the mourning cloak butterfly), Strymon melinus (the gray hairstreak butterfly), and Celastrina ladon (the spring azure butterfly).

Native Americans such as the Kumeyaay, Maidu, Pomo and Salish peoples used R. ursinus as a fresh and dried fruit source.

Type: Hardy shrub

Location: Sun or part sun

Hardiness zones: 3-9

Seeds per packet: 10