While out buying plants earlier in the season, I picked up a small strawberry plant on a whim and stuck it in the ground, hoping for a few berries at some point in the summer. I do not have much experience with growing edibles, but I figured strawberries couldn't be that hard!
The kind I got was Sequoia, and while the starter was small, it was very healthy, transplanted well and flourished. I'm just south of Chicago (Growing area 5), and even though we had a very chilly spring, the plant filled out nicely in it's planter, and I just kept waiting for it to bloom and fruit. It never did though.
Recently the weather finally shot up into "Hey it's summer now, enjoy your 95+ temps!" and for the past week the plant has been sending out runners, but still no berries or blooms, so I can only assume that it's not going to produce this season. So, what did I do wrong? The plant was well fertilized and watered weekly during cooler temps, though I've been watering the planter 2-3 times since the heat started in, and drainage was fine as well. It's had plenty of room - I started it on the end of a 1.5x3.5 rectangular box with some small coleus on the other end just to take up the extra space.
So, help? What did I do wrong, and how should I go about fixing it for next season?
- applestar
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I only did a cursory search, but it looks like Sequoia is a June bearer. That means it only flowers and bears fruit during a small window of time -- a couple of weeks -- in late spring/early summer. So let your plant make runners -- 4 or 5 I think -- and spread, and you will have many berries to pick in spring.
- hendi_alex
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There is a possibility that the original plant was immature and didn't set fruit this year. Next year you should be rewarded for your effort. Runners drain a plant of energy, so only allow them to form new plants when you want to renew your bed or add additional plants. Also, if runners are allowed to indiscriminately root, your bed will soon be over crowded and very difficult to manage.
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- Green Thumb
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One other though on the subject. We planted strawberries where the previous owners had had a burnt out, neglected lawn. After letting die back and tilling up that is. The first two years, runners, runners, runners. The neighbor frinally showed me the used bag of lawn fertilzer the old owners had used to 10 years, only nitrogen and nothing else. He said they burnt the lawn out with too much fertilizer the year they sold the property. So, if you planted them in a soil very rich in nitrogen you will get lots of runners.