Strawberry plant

  1. How to Plant, Grow, and Care For Strawberries
  2. Strawberries: Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Strawberries at Home
  3. Bare Root Strawberry Plants
  4. Our Guide to Growing Strawberries: Plant Care Tips
  5. How to Grow Strawberries in Pots
  6. Growing strawberries in the home garden


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How to Plant, Grow, and Care For Strawberries

Strawberries are perhaps one of the most popular fruits that gardeners grow in their gardens. Especially novice gardeners. But, there are many different types to consider, and there are growing conditions you'll want to meet in order to have an optimal harvest. In this article, organic gardening expert Logan Hailey examines how to successfully plant, grow, and care for Strawberries in your garden. There are few things better than a fresh strawberry straight from your garden. Sweet, flavorful, and refreshing, these scarlet red fruits are a decadent addition to smoothies, salads, desserts, or healthy snacks. Garden-fresh strawberries have an aroma and rich flavor unparalleled by any supermarket counterpart. Strawberries are an incredible asset for any gardener seeking to lower their food bill, add nutrition to their meals, and plant perennials that keep yielding year after year. Best of all, they are the perfect snack straight from the garden. If you’ve been wanting to grow small fruits but feel intimidated by bush berries or fruit trees, strawberries are the perfect place to start. They are resilient, adapted to many climates, and easy to care for. Contents • 1 History and Cultivation • 2 Propagation • 3 Planting • 4 How to Grow Strawberries • 4.1 Light • 4.2 Water • 4.3 Mulching • 4.4 Soil • 4.5 Climate and Temperature • 4.6 Fertilizing • 4.7 Maintenance • 5 Strawberry Varieties • 6 Pests and Diseases • 7 Plant Uses • 8 Frequently Asked Questions • 9 Final Thoughts Disease...

Strawberries: Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Strawberries at Home

Strawberries are one of the easiest fruits to grow. The taste of this home grown fruit is far more flavorful than you’ll find in a grocery store. Why? The sugar in berries converts to starch soon after they’re picked. Learn more about how to grow strawberries in the garden or inpots. The best thing about strawberries is that they’re easy to grow in almost all climates and soils across the United States and Canada—as long as you plant them in a locationthat getsfullsun. Strawberry plants come in threetypes: • June-bearing varieties bear fruit all at once, usually over a period of threeweeks.Day-length sensitive, these varieties produce buds in the autumn, flowers and fruits the following June, and runners during the long days of summer.Although called “June-bearing” or “June-bearers,” these strawberries bear earlier than June in warmer climates. • Everbearing varieties produce a big crop in spring, lightly in the summer, and another crop in late summer/fall.These varieties form buds during the long days of summer and the short days of autumn. The summer-formed buds flower and fruit in autumn, and the autumn-formed buds fruit the following spring. • Day-Neutral varieties produce fruit continuously through the season, until the first frost: Insensitive to day length, these varieties produce buds, fruits, and runners continuously if the temperature remains between 35° and 85°F (1° to 30°C). Production is less than that ofJune-bearers. For the home garden, we recommend June-bea...

Bare Root Strawberry Plants

We offer healthy bare-root strawberry plants, including varieties suited for establishing a home garden strawberry patch or for commercial production in the field, in containers and hanging baskets, or in the greenhouse. We offer day-neutral (everbearing) types as well as June-bearing (summer-bearing) types including early, mid, and late-season varieties.

Our Guide to Growing Strawberries: Plant Care Tips

Strawberries might be the most popular berry in the United States, evoking cherished summer memories and visions of homemade jam or sundaes. Store-bought strawberries hardly live up to those sentimental expectations, instead rousing concerns about farm labor and pesticides. This guide offers everything you need to know to grow your best strawberries this season. How to Plant Strawberries Strawberries propagate themselves through stolons that grow out of the plant's crown; thus, growers often follow suit and plant starts, then allow them to fill out a bed. Strawberry plots can produce for 3-5 years, so find a space you can dedicate to strawberries for several seasons if you choose. Growing From Seed However, garden strawberries are hybrids, and there is no guarantee you will get the strawberry characteristics you loved. Some seed companies offer strawberry seeds for Alpine varieties and a few heirlooms, so if you are planning a large strawberry garden, this may be an economical way to start. The different types of strawberry growth habits determine how to plant them. June-bearing plants that produce abundant stolons can be planted early in spring with plenty of space between the mother plants (18-24 inches apart, in rows 36-48 inches apart). This is called matted-row production, and it works best with disease-resistant varieties. The Marina Demidiuk / Getty Images Although mulch may harbor voles and slugs, it is recommended for weed suppression, retaining moisture, and espe...

How to Grow Strawberries in Pots

Marie Iannotti is a life-long gardener and a veteran Master Gardener with nearly three decades of experience. She's also an author of three gardening books, a plant photographer, public speaker, and a former Cornell Cooperative Extension Horticulture Educator. Marie's garden writing has been featured in newspapers and magazines nationwide and she has been interviewed for Martha Stewart Radio, National Public Radio, and numerous articles. The Spruce / Kara Riley • Prepare the Plants You can start strawberries from either bare-root crowns or transplants. Transplants will immediately look lush and pretty in containers, but you'll need to wait for dormant bare-root crowns to establish and produce leaves. Strawberry plants dislike crowded conditions, so plant only three strawberry plants per square foot of soil (for a 12-inch by 12-inch pot, for example). Because their roots are fairly shallow, measure the surface area of the container to determine the space it will have (as long as the container doesn't taper sharply.) • Place the Container Set the pot in a location that receives at least eight to 12 hours of sun each day to ensure plenty of flowers and fruits. If the sunlight is coming from only one direction, rotate the container every three to four days if possible for the plants to grow evenly. Also, make sure the plants are protected. Just because the strawberries are in pots doesn't mean pests can't reach them. Insects, birds, and rodents will still be attracted to your ...

Growing strawberries in the home garden

Quick facts • Strawberries need full sun to produce maximum fruit. • Space plants 12 to 18 inches apart. • Strawberries are self-fertile, but require bees for pollination. • Remove some of the runners throughout the season or your strawberry plants will take over your yard. • After removing flowers for a few weeks after planting, you can pick fruit later that summer. • One June-bearing plant can produce up to 120 new daughter plants in one season. Types of strawberries Woodland strawberries There are three types of strawberries available to the home gardener. • June-bearing strawberries produce a large, concentrated crop in mid-June to early July. • Ever-bearing types produce two crops, one in early summer and the second in early fall. • Day neutral plants produce fruit throughout most of the growing season. Of the three types, June-bearing strawberries normally produce the largest yield per season, but in a short period of time. Strawberry plants usually begin flowering in mid-May in southern Minnesota. For June-bearing varieties it takes about four weeks from plants flowering to picking fruit. Day neutral and ever-bearing types begin flowering around the same time in the spring and take about the same time between flowering and harvest. The difference is that they keep flowering through the summer months. In addition to leaves, flowers and fruit, a strawberry plant has a crown, roots, runners and produces daughter plants. The woodland strawberry The woodland strawberry (...