These young strawberry plants are sending out runners (the shoots to the left).
The green in the center of this flower is the undeveloped berry.
Mulch is a must to keep fruit clean. Here you can see berries in various stages of growth, from flower to green to ripe.
Black plastic is a popular mulch for strawberries because it helps warm the spring soil and is less attractive to slugs than organic mulches.
In this bed, strawberries spread like a ground cover. The flowers are violas and the shrub is rosemary.
Natural sprawlers, strawberries will eagerly tumble down a low stone wall.
This arch made of wire fencing can support a row cover for frost protection in the spring and bird netting later when the fruit comes along. Remove row covers when possible to encourage visits by bees that help with pollination.
Special containers called strawberry jars are a space-efficient way to grow strawberries in a pot. Look for one with deep pockets like this one.
Fruit in strawberry jars is clean and easy to pick. Snip off runners so that plants can concentrate on making berries.
Homegrown berries ripen on the plant, which brings out their full flavor and sweetness. But, they are also softer (not firm for shipping), so don't pile them too deeply in your bucket.The best strawberries you’ll ever taste will come from a garden, because fully ripened strawberries have a rich, aromatic flavor unmatched by their supermarket counterparts. Savoring the melt-in-your-mouth juiciness of freshly picked strawberries is but one reason to grow your own. As the first fruits to ripen in spring, strawberries are nutritious assets to any garden. The sturdy little plants prosper when planted in properly prepared beds or rows, or you can put them to work as edible edgings or let them sprawl over the top of a wall. Strawberries are happy to grow in strawberry jars and hanging baskets, too.
The Strawberry Life Cycle
Success with strawberries asks that you understand their life cycle. Like most hardy perennials, strawberries die back in winter and start growing vigorously as the soil warms in spring. After bearing fruit (as early as February in Florida, or June farther north), strawberries produce numerous runners with baby plants at the tips. Many runners root themselves nearby yet remain attached to the mother plant. All types of strawberries produce more fruit if you clip off most of the runners, allowing each plant to produce no more than 3 daughter plants each summer.
Exhausted from producing fruit and offspring, strawberries typically take a second rest period during summer's second half. When kept weeded and lightly watered, most parent plants – and their offspring – perk up and grow again for a while in the fall. Even though it may look like little is going on with strawberries in September, the plants are busy during the fall months developing the latent buds that will grow into next spring's flowers.
- From Zone 6 northward, strawberries are best planted in spring so they will be well-rooted by the following winter. Containers can be replanted in late summer and moved to a cool, protected place such as an unheated garage during the coldest months.
- From Zone 7 southward, strawberries are most often planted in fall and grown as renewable hardy annuals. Once a planting is established, simply lift your healthiest plants each September, and replant them in a freshly renovated site.
- In all areas, strawberries can be allowed to grow into a vibrant green ground cover that requires little maintenance. The plants won't bear as heavily as more intensively managed plants, but they will still produce delicious berries, year after year.
Soil, Planting and Care
Strawberries need at least 8 hours of full sun each day, and they prefer slightly acidic soil with a pH between 5.5 and 6.8. If soils in your area are naturally alkaline, it is best to grow strawberries in half-barrels or other large containers filled with potting soil. Strawberries may also sulk in heavy clay, which should be generously amended with composted leaves, fully rotted sawdust, or another bulky type of organic matter before planting strawberries. After mixing in 4 inches or more of compost, rake clay soil into raised mounds to further improve drainage. If your soil is sandy, simply cultivate to remove weeds, and mix in a 1-inch layer of rich compost or rotted manure.
Strawberries eagerly produce offspring, so it is best to space them in rows 18 inches apart. Be sure to set the plants so that their roots are well covered with soil but the central growing bud (crown) is exposed to light and fresh air. This is very important; if you bury the crown, the plant could easily rot. Water them in well. Any type of mulch – from black plastic to pine straw to shredded leaves – will keep the soil moist and the plants clean. Fertilize with Bonnie’s Herb and Vegetable Food for excellent results.
Look for your plants to begin blooming in early spring, and the flowers must be visited by bees and other pollinating insects before they can set fruit. In warm, sunny weather, berries ripen about 30 days after blossoms are fertilized.
- June-bearing varieties such as Tennessee Beauty bear all at once, usually over a period of about 3 weeks. Although called June-bearing, these bear earlier than June in warm climates.
- Everbearing varieties like Ozark Beauty, Quinault, and Sequoia produce a big crop from spring flowers, set light flushes of fruit through summer, and then bloom and bear again in late summer and fall.
Troubleshooting
Slugs often chew holes in strawberries just as they begin to ripen. Organic mulches such as straw encourage slugs, so where slugs are a problem, a plastic mulch helps. In summer, several fungal diseases cause dark spots to form on leaves. Clipping or mowing strawberry foliage and raking it away in summer can interrupt the life cycles of some strawberry pests and diseases. By far the worst pests of strawberries are birds. To keep robins, brown thrashers, and other fruit-eaters from stealing your berries, cover the plants with lightweight bird netting when the berries begin to ripen.
Sometimes your fruit may be small because of heat and drought. Once you start watering and the weather improves, the new fruit should grow back normal size. Sometimes berries are also misshappen; this is from poor pollination. You see a lot more of this in cool wet weather when the bees are not active.
Harvest and Storage
Pick strawberries in the morning, when the fruits are cool, and immediately put them in the refrigerator. Wait until just before you eat or cook them to rinse the berries thoroughly with cool water. Extra strawberries can be frozen, dried, or made into jam or preserves.
Updated 1/17/09