Hello everyone ive being raising up some strawberries for some time now but I don't know much about them such as: my strawberries are becoming littler so on.
If you could reply any information on strawberries that would be great and when I get replies I will add different fruits to the subject.
Such as Watermelons,raspberries,mangoes,rockmelons, etc
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- Super Green Thumb
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- applestar
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Waiting for your reply to see what I can contribute.
MOD HAT ON DON'T add different fruits to this thread. If I remember correctly, you already have threads posted for watermelon, raspberry, mango, and apple. You'll get better responses when topic of a thread is clearly defined. The object is not to get lots of responses but good helpful ones.
MOD HAT ON DON'T add different fruits to this thread. If I remember correctly, you already have threads posted for watermelon, raspberry, mango, and apple. You'll get better responses when topic of a thread is clearly defined. The object is not to get lots of responses but good helpful ones.
-
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 6113
- Joined: Sun Mar 28, 2010 11:43 pm
- applestar
- Mod
- Posts: 30551
- Joined: Thu May 01, 2008 7:21 pm
- Location: Zone 6, NJ (3/M)4/E ~ 10/M(11/B)
It's spring for you now right? Do you know what variety they are? Strawberries can be divided into essentially three types - What we call "June bearers" that produces lots of strawberries all at once in late spring/early summer for period of about 2~3 weeks, "Day Neutrals" that produce a flush of smaller number of berries around the same time as June bearers, then some more much smaller numbers every month, and "Everberers" which though I've never had them myself I understand to basically grow two large crops in spring and in fall.
If yours has been fruiting for nearly 6 weeks, I would think it's normal for the berry size to start diminishing.
You don't mean the plants themselves are getting smaller, do you? I believe what you are talking about is a Strawberry Jar (It is a kind of a container -- as opposed to being grown directly in the ground ). Sometimes, those jars are not big enough. Sometimes the issue is water/moisture distribution in the soil and they dry out easily. The usual recommendation is to bury a perforated PVC or wire tube filled with pea gravel as a central column and pour water into the tube to water. ...but you have to do this at planting time.
Any time you're growing in a container of any kind, available soil nutrients are washed away as well as used up, so you need to fertilize once a month, or else every two weeks with diluted fertilizer. AACT -- Actively Aerated Compost Tea is one example and is described in a long sticky thread at the top of the Compost Forum.
If yours has been fruiting for nearly 6 weeks, I would think it's normal for the berry size to start diminishing.
You don't mean the plants themselves are getting smaller, do you? I believe what you are talking about is a Strawberry Jar (It is a kind of a container -- as opposed to being grown directly in the ground ). Sometimes, those jars are not big enough. Sometimes the issue is water/moisture distribution in the soil and they dry out easily. The usual recommendation is to bury a perforated PVC or wire tube filled with pea gravel as a central column and pour water into the tube to water. ...but you have to do this at planting time.
Any time you're growing in a container of any kind, available soil nutrients are washed away as well as used up, so you need to fertilize once a month, or else every two weeks with diluted fertilizer. AACT -- Actively Aerated Compost Tea is one example and is described in a long sticky thread at the top of the Compost Forum.