Difference between revisions of "Strawberry"

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== Gallery ==
 
== Gallery ==
 
<gallery caption="" widths="170px" heights="120px" perrow="4">
 
<gallery caption="" widths="170px" heights="120px" perrow="4">
File:Strawberry half year old 111223.jpg|This strawberry plant is about half a year old. It will give fruits in the next year and the year after.
 
 
File:Harvest of strawberries.jpg|Harvest of strawberries
 
File:Harvest of strawberries.jpg|Harvest of strawberries
 
File:Strawberry flower.jpg|Strawberry flower
 
File:Strawberry flower.jpg|Strawberry flower

Revision as of 01:51, 14 January 2012

Strawberry plant with fruits

Cultivation

Diagram of the process of photosynthesis

The strawberry can be propagated from seeds or by using the new shoots that mature plants make, usually after the plant has given fruit that year. The shoots quickly make their own roots and when they have grown big enough, you can select the best ones and give them their own place.
Wild strawberries grow mostly on open places in forests, so give your strawberries a sunny place and make sure that the soil is rich of humus.
The best time to do this are the first few weeks of August. These plants will give harvest for the two consecutive years, therefore make sure that you renew your strawberry plants each year, for example half of them.
The strawberry fruits don't like to come in touch with wet soil. You can protect them by covering the soil around the plants with a layer of mulch, straw or sawdust. They will reward a rich gift of compost with giving ample fruits, up to a few hundred per plant in each season.

Gardeners distinguish two main types of strawberry: The "June-bearing" strawberries, which bear their fruit in the early summer, and "ever-bearing" strawberries, which often bear several crops of fruit throughout the season.

Gallery

See also

External links