As autumn leaves fall and the days become shorter, many gardens are plunged into gloom.

One saving grace is berries – from reds and oranges to blacks – which brighten up the often colour-free winter garden, and provide vital food for birds. Many of them stand bold against evergreen leaves, providing an impressive display of contrast.

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Tips for choosing the best bushes for berries

We take you through the key things to consider when picking bushes for berries along with three of the best bushes for berries to plant. Winter doesn’t have to be so drab after all.

Rosehips last through winter

Bushes for berries
Rosehips covered in frost in autumn (Thinkstock/PA)

Berries, or hips, are a must for anyone who wants colour in their garden in the coldest months. And the first place to look is roses, some of which produce wonderful hips such as Rosa ‘Scharlachglut’ and Rosa x jacksonii ‘Max Graf’, which both produce a profusion of red hips.

Bright orange and red hues also come from Rosa moyesii. Alternatively, darker hips, ranging from a deep chocolate colour to black, come from the burnet roses, Rosa pimpinellifolia.

When you are buying roses, do remember that not all of them produce hips, so you need to ask at your garden centre.

Keep it low-maintenance

Bushes for berries
Bright red cotoneaster berries (Thinkstock/PA)

Other common berry-producers include the easy-to-grow, low-maintenance cotoneaster which provides a wealth of colour in winter. Its nutritious berries are feasted on by blackbirds, waxwings and thrushes so you can help feed them through the colder months.

Big-berried varieties include C microphyllus – the berries are as big as the leaves – which look even better if the frost clings to them. Alternatively, C lacteus red berries will endure the harshest winter and C Rothschildianus produces bright yellow berries.

Deter intruders

Bushes for berries
Pyracantha orange berries. (Thinkstock/PA)

A slightly harsher but no less colourful addition to the winter garden is the pyracantha. And if you’re security-conscious, you might plant a few of these sharp-spiked plants in vulnerable spots to deter intruders.

But the berries will provide you with a wonderful show of colour. Try ‘Orange Glow’ for a splash of cheer against a drab backdrop, or ‘Golden Dome’ if you prefer yellow berries.

Check plant gender for berry success

Many gardeners complain that their shrubs do not produce berries, and this is likely to be a problem of gender rather than any disease or weakness in the plant.

Bushes for berries
Holly berries (Thinkstock/PA)

Most varieties of holly, for instance, carry the male and female flowers on separate plants, so one of each is required for fertilisation to take place.

To pollinate, the female has to have a male nearby. Many of the variegated cultivars are male and will never bear berries. Also, some of the names are misleading, such as ‘Golden Queen’, which is a male, while ‘Golden King’ and ‘Indian Chief’ are both female.

But there are varieties that are self-fertile, with male and female flowers, where one plant is therefore capable of producing berries. These include Ilex aquifolium ‘J.C. van Tol’, which produces bright red berries, and I. a. ‘Pyramidalis’, which is similar but with pale green leaves.

Display skimmias

Bushes for berries
Skimmia japonica with berries (Thinkstock/PA)

Another wonderful shrub producing berries in autumn and winter is Skimmia japonica. This variety also needs both male and female plants to produce its vibrant red berries. However, you can get the hermaphrodite S. japonica ssp. reevesiana which has both male and female parts.

For a fabulous display of purple fruits, you need to grow a male variety near Gaultheria mucronata ‘Stag River’.

Others which require a male to pollinate the fruit-bearing female include sea buckthorn (Hippophae rhamnoides), Aucuba japonica and Viburnum davidii. Trees and shrubs that bear ornamental fruit without needing two plants include Arbutus unedo, crataegus, malus, sorbus, pyracantha, cotoneaster, euonymus and berberis.

Dark and dramatic berries

Darker, more dramatic colours can be obtained from the berries of the berberis. Try B darwinii – it produces masses of blue-black fruits and is particularly suited to a light spot in the garden.

Bushes for berries
Add black berries to the scene. (Thinkstock/PA)

Viburnums are also winter wonders for their delicious scents and their flowers and berries.

V tinus has deep blue berries which contrast effectively with its evergreen leaves, while V opulus Xanthocarpum provides us with big bunches of yellow berries and makes a good hedging plant, and provides food for birds throughout winter.

Many viburnums do grow to quite a size, but you can get more compact versions which will give good shows of red berries, such as the slow-growing V opulus Compactum.

How to grow three of the best bushes for berries

Expert Guy Barter of the RHS discusses three of the best bushes for berries:

1.  Guelder rose (Viburnum opulus)

Bushes for berries
Viburnum opulus ‘compactum’.

Try this tall native quick-growing deciduous shrub with lobed leaves, reminiscent of an acer, with good autumn colour and masses of translucent red berries following white summer flowers.

A particularly lovely yellow form is also available (Viburnum opulus ‘Xanthocarpum’). Berries hang for weeks but are eventually consumed by birds.

It’s not fussy about soil or site and can even tolerate shade. It works as a stand-alone shrub, in groups, or as part of a lightly pruned informal native hedge.

2. Clerodendrum trichotomum var. fargesii

Bushes for berries
Clerodendrum trichotomum var. fargesii (Vicky Turner/RHS/PA)

This moderately fast-growing medium-to-large deciduous shrub produces sweet-smelling white summer flowers followed by the startlingly turquoise berries, encased in a red ear-like calyces.

There is even a variegated cultivar: Clerodendrum trichotomum var. fargesii ‘Carnival’. Any soil suits clerodendrum except the driest ones, but it does need at least partial sun. Suckers (shoots from the roots) often form, which can be dug up and given to gardening friends.

3. Skimmia japonica

Bushes for berries
Skimmia japonica (Anna Brockman/RHS/PA)

As discussed above, these slow-growing evergreen medium-size shrubs are widely sold in autumn as they are particularly valuable in winter bedding and container displays.

Skimmia japonica ‘Nymans’ carries abundant red berries that last deep into winter. Skimmia japonica ‘Rubella’ is a widely sold male with bright red flower buds. Moist soils or potting composts suit them well and they prefer shade to hot places and especially relish shady patio containers.

Now you have all the information on bushes for berries, you can turn your garden into a winter wonderland of colour.

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