Overall sentiment in the reviews is mixed but leans positive regarding the home's atmosphere, cleanliness, and core caregiving team, while raising consistent concerns about food quality, staff consistency, and administrative/financial policies. Multiple reviewers emphasize that the home offers a warm, faith-based, family-style environment and that many caregivers are kind, loving and compassionate. The house manager is singled out positively, and the facility itself is repeatedly described as beautiful, clean, safe, and nurturing. Regular housekeeping services (laundry, swept floors) and familial meals contribute to a home-like feel and a sense of safety for residents.
Care quality is described in predominantly positive terms by several reviewers: family members felt their loved ones were safe and happy, were kept informed by staff, and benefited from compassionate caregivers. However, there is a clear pattern of variability in staff performance. While some staff members receive strong praise for their attitudes and care, other staff are described as only agreeable or exhibiting lower-quality interactions. A specific concern noted by at least one reviewer is poor bedside manner, indicating that while overall care can be loving, interpersonal skills and professionalism are inconsistent across personnel.
Facility and daily operations receive favorable comments about cleanliness and maintenance. Reviewers repeatedly mention a tidy environment, laundry service, and attentive housekeeping (floors swept), which supports the impression of a well-kept smaller residence. The smaller, residential scale is often framed positively as contributing to a nurturing, family-style atmosphere; however, the same scale may magnify the impact of staff variability and management shortcomings for individual residents.
Dining emerges as a notable area of concern despite the family-style presentation. Meals are described as looking healthy and being served family-style, but reviewers state that roughly 75% of food items are canned or frozen and that fresh fruits and vegetables are lacking. Several reviewers specifically say dietary promises were not adhered to, indicating a gap between expectations set by the facility and the actual food quality provided. This is a specific, recurring complaint and may affect residents with particular nutritional needs or family members who expect fresh produce and higher-quality meal preparation.
Management, policies, and financial practices are the other central source of complaints. Reviewers cite a $3,000 upfront nonrefundable fee, a requirement to prepay next month’s rent at move-in, and an inflexible 30-day notice to leave. A serious concern recorded in the summaries is that after a resident's spouse died, rent had been paid and no reimbursement was offered — an outcome that family members found troubling and indicative of rigid or poorly communicated financial policies. Additionally, reviewers report that promises made by management have not always been kept, which, combined with the strict financial terms, contributes to dissatisfaction and distrust among some families.
In summary, The Mulberry House II appears to offer a warm, faith-oriented, clean, and home-like setting with many compassionate caregivers and an effective house manager. These strengths are tempered by repeated concerns about food quality (heavy reliance on canned/frozen items and lack of fresh produce), inconsistent staff performance and bedside manner, and stringent or nonrefundable financial/administrative policies that have negatively affected at least one family. Prospective residents and families who prioritize a small, faith-based, nurturing environment and strong housekeeping may find this community appealing; those who require consistently higher-quality fresh meals, predictable staff professionalism, or more flexible/transparent financial terms should probe these areas carefully before committing.







