The best berries to grow together are the ones that are low maintenance and keep popping up every year!

From fresh strawberries on pancakes in the morning to preserving jam. When I started my homestead garden, a backyard berry patch was at the top of my wish list. The kids would eat them by the handfuls and it’s one of the best things I’ve ever done for our family. One plant was never enough and the best part is berries come back year after year, they’re low-maintenance once established, and they make jam, pies, and snacks all season long. Whether you have a big yard or a small corner to spare, here’s how to build your very own backyard berry patch.

Table of Contents

female hands picking blueberries in the garden close-up

Why Every Garden Needs a Berry Patch

Here’s why berries are the ultimate homestead crop:

  • They come back every year with very little effort.
  • They fit into small spaces and even containers.
  • They spread and multiply, giving you more plants for free.
  • They taste better homegrown (store-bought berries just can’t compete).

I started with just 10 strawberry plants, and now my berry patch gives us fresh berries all summer long — with enough left for jam!

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Homemade strawberry preserves from the berry patch

Best Spot for Your Berry Patch

Sunlight

Berries love full sun — at least 6-8 hours a day. Morning sun is ideal, since it dries dew and helps prevent disease.

Drainage

Avoid low spots where water pools. Berries need well-drained soil — raised beds work great if your soil is heavy clay.

Accessibility

Make sure your berry patch is easy to reach — you’ll want to check for ripe fruit and pests daily during peak season.

I put my berry patch along a fence — easy to trellis raspberries and keeps runners from strawberries from taking over the yard.

Best Berries to Grow Together

Growing Berries

Some berries play well together, and others prefer their own space. Here’s a quick guide:

BerryBest Grown WithNeeds Its Own Space?
StrawberriesBlueberries, herbs, onionsNo
RaspberriesBlackberries, nasturtiumsNo
BlueberriesStrawberries, herbsYes (loves acidic soil)
BlackberriesRaspberries, garlicNo

I grow strawberries at ground level, raspberries on a fence, and blueberries in their own raised bed with acidic soil mix. Everyone’s happy.

Step-by-Step: How to Plant & Care for Berries

Step 1: Prepare the Soil

  • For strawberries: Well-drained, fertile soil with lots of compost.
  • For raspberries & blackberries: Loamy, rich soil with good drainage.
  • For blueberries: Acidic soil (pH 4.5-5.5) — mix in peat moss or pine needles.

If you have poor soil, raised beds filled with the right mix are the way to go. We have very acidic soil naturally and berries grow easily.

Step 2: Planting Time

BerryBest Planting Time
StrawberriesEarly spring or fall
RaspberriesEarly spring
BlueberriesEarly spring
BlackberriesEarly spring

• Space strawberries 12-18 inches apart.

  • Space raspberries & blackberries 2-3 feet apart, with 6-8 feet between rows.
  • Space blueberries 3-5 feet apart.

Step 3: Mulch & Water

  • Add straw or wood chip mulch to keep moisture in and weeds down.
  • Water deeply once or twice a week — berries like consistent moisture.

I use straw mulch for strawberries and pine needles for blueberries — keeps weeds out and soil just right.

Step 4: Support & Prune

  • Raspberries & blackberries need a trellis or fence to keep canes off the ground.
  • Prune raspberries in late winter to remove dead canes.
  • Thin strawberries every 2-3 years to keep runners from overcrowding.

I built a simple T-post and wire trellis for my raspberries — cheap, easy, and it works!

Here are the best tools for the job shop here!

Step 5: Protect & Harvest

  • Use bird netting when berries start ripening.
  • Pick berries when they’re fully ripe for best flavor.
  • Don’t wash until ready to eat to prevent mold.

Teach kids to gently twist strawberries off the stem instead of yanking — saves the plants!

Companion Plants to Boost Your Berry Patch

Good Companions

CompanionBenefits
BorageAttracts pollinators & improves flavor
Chives & OnionsRepel aphids & slugs
MarigoldsDeter nematodes & pests
NasturtiumsTrap crop for aphids
ThymeGround cover & pest deterrent

Avoid

  • Tomatoes, potatoes, peppers near strawberries (disease risk)
  • Cabbage family crops near strawberries (heavy feeders)

My strawberries & onions make great neighbors — and I get fewer aphids on both!

FAQs About Growing Berries

A small patch — a 4×8 bed for strawberries and a 10-foot row for raspberries — can feed a family fresh berries all summer. Expand if you want berries for preserving.

Jelly beans cake halvah chocolate bar cookie shortbread muffin pudding croissant. Shortbread icing icing tart, chocolate cake. Cotton candy soufflé pastry jelly beans apple pie toffee a lollipop danish.

Strawberries – First year if planted early.

Raspberries & blackberries – Second year.

Blueberries – Year 2 or 3, but worth the wait.

The first year, yes (watering, mulching, training canes). After that, they’re mostly hands-off aside from pruning and picking.

Absolutely! Strawberries, blueberries, and dwarf raspberries do great in pots — just water regularly since containers dry out fast.

A backyard berry patch is one of the best investments you can make in your garden. Berries are delicious, nutritious, and they come back year after year, giving you fresh snacks, homemade jam, and plenty to share with family (or the occasional bird!). Whether you start with a few strawberries or build a full berry hedge, you’ll never regret making space for these sweet little treasures.

Grow Your Happy

Linnea

Did you build a berry patch? We’d love to see! Tag @homesteadwildflower on Instagram! #homesteadwildflower

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