Always
Room for Strawberries
By Melinda Myers
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[February 05, 2022]
As you plan this year’s garden, be sure to
include some strawberries. They are low in calories, high in vitamin
C and antioxidants, and provide seasonal interest in gardens and
containers.
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Best of all, you don’t need much space to grow
this delicious fruit. There are three types of strawberries: June or
spring bearing, everbearing, and day neutral. Select the best type
of strawberry for your space and harvest needs.
June-bearing strawberries produce one crop of berries in late spring
to early summer, depending on where you garden. They produce the
largest harvest but in the shortest span of time. Plant now and
enjoy an abundant harvest next year.
Everbearing strawberries usually produce two crops of berries each
year. You’ll enjoy fresh strawberries early and late in the season,
while day-neutral plants produce berries throughout the growing
season.
Delizz®, a day-neutral strawberry, was the first ever strawberry to
be selected as an All-America Selections Winner. Just like the
flower and vegetable winners, it was tested nationally and selected
for its performance for the home garden. This 2016 winner is a
compact plant perfect for hanging baskets, containers or garden
beds. It can be started from seed or transplants and will produce
sweet fruit the first year and all season long, even during hot
weather.
Up the ornamental appeal of traditional in-ground plantings with a
star shaped or tiered bed. The elevated beds make for easier
planting, weeding, and harvesting. You’ll find a variety of tiered
shaped beds to purchase or plans to make your own.
Use strawberries as a groundcover in sunny well-drained locations
for an abundant harvest. Their attractive leaves, white flowers, red
fruit and brilliant red fall color add sparkle to the landscape and
provide fresh fruit for your meals.
Or grow them in a container, window box or hanging basket on your
porch, balcony, or deck. They'll be close at hand and easy to
harvest.
Mix a few everbearing or day-neutral strawberries in with flowers to
create an edible and ornamental planter. The harvest will be smaller
when grown in a mixed container, but the flowers, fruit and fall
color add ornamental appeal and the fruit will be a welcome treat.
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Boost the harvest by growing strawberries in their
own container. Fill a hanging basket and watch as the runners
cascade over the edge for added ornamental appeal.
Try filling a traditional strawberry pot – container with planting
hole openings on the top and sides – with plants that produce
several harvests and remove the runners as needed. Keep all the
plants from top to bottom looking their best with this DIY watering
device. Place soil on the bottom of the container. Set a couple of
perforated PVC down through the planter. Slide the plants through
the hole from the inside of the pot. Fill the remaining space with
soil. Gently tamp and water thoroughly to eliminate air pockets. As
you water, the water travels through the pipe and out the holes,
providing moisture to all plants from top to bottom.
Check containers daily and water thoroughly and often enough to keep
the soil slightly moist. Reduce maintenance and increase success by
incorporating a low nitrogen slow-release fertilizer into the soil
at planting or sprinkle over the soil surface as needed. This type
of fertilizer promotes growth without interfering with flowering and
fruit production.
Start now identifying spaces to add strawberries to your landscape,
deck and balcony. Then order seeds or plants early for the greatest
selection. Before you know it, you’ll be enjoying garden fresh
strawberries in your morning cereal, salads or as a snack at the end
of the day.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including
The Midwest Gardener’s Handbook and Small Space Gardening. She hosts
The Great Courses “How to Grow Anything” DVD series and the
nationally-syndicated Melinda’s Garden Moment TV & radio program.
Myers is a columnist and contributing editor for Birds & Blooms
magazine. Her web site is www.melindamyers.com.
[Photo courtesy of MelindaMyers.com]
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