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Strawberries

Veseys Home » Learn » Planting Guide » Fruits & Berries » Strawberries

Fragaria x ananassa

Hardy to Zone 2 if covered

Plant your strawberry roots as soon as your soil has warmed. If you must keep them for a short period, keep the roots slightly moist and cool. Choose a sunny location in your garden with a soil pH of 6-6.5 and set plants out on a cloudy day or in the evening to avoid the stress of heat on the young plants. While preparing the beds, soak roots with water. Till in compost and dig a shallow trench for each row with rows 4' apart. With your hands, form a small dome of soil every 12" in the row. Trim your strawberry roots to 5" long to encourage healtier, new root development. Drape roots over soil dome, with the crown centered at the peak. Add soil, tamp down and water. Crown of plant should be at the soil surface. Keep the bed weed free and side-dress one month after planting. Pinch off all flowers the first summer to send more energy to the development of runners (daughter plants). Use a seed and weed free mulch in the late fall and place directly over the plants to protect from freeze and thaw cycles. Remove mulch after last frost in spring and place into paths between rows. Strawberries will produce a vigorous crop of juicy berries in the early summer of your second year which will be followed by heavy runner production. To keep production strong and healthy, plant new roots into a new area after your second year of harvest.