For me, 2014 was a good year, too--my five rabbiteye blueberry bushes produced 20 pounds. This year, about a handful. In late March, it dropped to about 24 degrees when the plants were nearly in
full bloom. I tried hosing them down at 4 am, to no avail.

If you buy now, you need to preserve them somehow. The easiest is freezing, and I froze about 6 pounds' worth today (and froze the same last summer from my own bushes). I use frozen ones for pies. Another way is to make preserves, which I also did last year. And they can be dehydrated.
Dehydrating is pretty easy. I pick over them to pull out the moldy ones (sometimes that isn't an issue, but it often is with store-bought berries), wash them, dump them onto a dehydrator tray, and subject them to a 135-degree breeze for two days. What's left is a pile of shriveled berries dry enough to keep without molding in the container.

One does have to be careful to check to be sure they are really dried out. I did lose a whole container of berries one time to mold because I didn't get them sufficiently dehydrated. So I'm a little paranoid about it now.
Some fruits I do not particularly like when dehydrated, but blueberries are okay. I probably prefer fresh ones, but this is definitely a case of constrained optimization: is a dehydrated blueberry worth at least 40% of a fresh one? At times, that's the price differential.
It took me a while to get into the swing of various food preservation methods, and I'm still learning new ones (plus learning which ones don't work). With my own trees, bushes, and garden, it's a must, but it makes sense sometimes with store-bought produce, as well.
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