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Growing Strawberry Plants

(Fragaria)

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
        P P            

(Best months for planting Strawberry Plants in USA - Zone 5a regions)

P = Plant direct in garden where they are to grow.


  • Easy to grow. Plant with crown (of roots) just covered.. Best planted at soil temperatures between 50°F and 68°F. (Show °C/cm)
  • Space plants: 12 - 39 inches apart
  • Harvest in approximately 11 weeks. Strawberries bruise easily when ripe, handle carefully. Pick with a small piece of stem attached..
  • Compatible with: Better in a bed on their own to allow good sun and air circulation
  • Avoid growing with: If you are using rotation beds, avoid putting strawberries where you have grown tomatoes, potatoes, peppers or eggplant
  • Ripening fruit
  • Strawberry plants

Strawberries are low-growing, leafy plants,between 12 - 15cm (about 6 inches) high and will spread to about 50 – 100cm (20 – 40 inches). They have five petalled flowers, usually white or sometimes pink. The flowers are followed by delicious red fruits, which have their seeds on the outside. Later in the season, the plants send out runners like thin stems, across the garden. They will take root to form new plants.

At the end of fruiting, trim off old yellow leaves and clean up any mouldy fruit still attached.

Strawberries like well drained soil with plenty of humus . To prepare your bed, dig in some compost before planting and possibly use a liquid fertiliser during the growing season. Well fed strawberries taste better. To protect the fruit from moulds, use some form of mulch around the plants. Straw, pine needles, or black plastic are all suitable. Mulch will also help suppress weeds. Protect your plants with some sort of netting or bird scarer or you will lose most of your crop.

Culinary hints - cooking and eating Strawberry Plants

Pick strawberries and eat them straight from the garden - warm from the sunshine, delicious!

Strawberries can be used in any dessert needing soft fruit or berries. Summer pudding which also has raspberries and blackberries or boysenberries, mousse, trifle, dipped in melted chocolate or just with cream.
Sprinkle a bowl of strawberries with balsamic vinegar and a little sugar to enhance the flavour and colour.


Your comments and tips

Display Newest first | Oldest first, Show comments for USA | for all countries
20 May 13, Joe Fentaller (Australia - tropical climate)
what is the best region to grow straberries in Australia
18 May 13, diana (Canada - Zone 6a Temperate Warm Summer climate)
What is the best type of strawberry for zone 6a?
30 Mar 13, Noel Challis (Australia - temperate climate)
I am just starting a strawberry bed and require 60 plants or runners. Can anybody help. Will pay transport and packaging costs. Can not afford commercial or nursery plants.
28 Apr 13, Andre (Australia - sub-tropical climate)
Hi Noel, I'm redoing my strawberry patch and have more plants than I know what to do with. I am in Brisbane. Let me know if you are interested and you can have as many as you like.
08 Feb 13, Jase (Australia - cool/mountain climate)
Does incredibly well in Aquaponics.
20 Jan 13, Maria Simmons (Australia - temperate climate)
I planted 6 strawberry plants in a hanging strawberry planter on 30/12/2012. When can I expect to see flowers and fruit? Plants are in full sun and I water every night.
09 Nov 12, rod (Australia - temperate climate)
i have insects eating holes in my strawberrys leaves it is not snails what is the insect and how do i control them
26 Nov 12, Eva (Australia - temperate climate)
Beetles i guess. they come out at night. kill them by hand or spray pyrethrum.
09 Oct 12, ash (Australia - temperate climate)
some strawberries take up to 5 months to grow!
05 Aug 12, Jen (Australia - tropical climate)
Could I grow strawberries in hanging guttering 15cm deep by 4m long? Do they need full sun or can they handle part sun?
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This planting guide is a general reference intended for home gardeners. We recommend that you take into account your local conditions in making planting decisions. Gardenate is not a farming or commercial advisory service. For specific advice, please contact your local plant suppliers, gardening groups, or agricultural department. The information on this site is presented in good faith, but we take no responsibility as to the accuracy of the information provided.

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