Strawberry planting and feeding

Vegetable, fruit and herb gardening

Moderator: Moderator Team

Strawberry planting and feeding

Postby Pete » 27 Feb 2011 19:34

Whilst tidying up the strawberry bed, I found about twenty young plants rooted from runners which I had missed last Autumn. These had now set good roots. Dug them out and cut the runners.

Created a new bed for these by putting shredded newspaper into a shallow trench and adding some well rotted horse manure. Covered with soil, raking in some pelleted chicken manure, then planted my new strawberry plants about 20cm apart in both directions.

What do other gardeners use a as a fertiliser at planting time for strawberries and throughout the season in the months before flowering and fruiting?
Pete
Gardening Gloves
 
Posts: 6
Joined: 27 Feb 2011 19:13
Location: Lincolnshire

Postby gardening_guru » 27 Feb 2011 19:57

Hello Pete,

Good question, I don't think strawberries need as much feeding as other, more hungry fruit and vegetable crops. You also have to be careful not to feed them too much because they might produce to much foliage at the expense of fruits. I would sprinkle a couple of handfuls of bonemeal per m2 into the soil at planting time. Then once you have picked all the fruit, sprinkle a couple of handfuls of potash per m2 amongst the strawberry patch.
George aka The Gardening Guru
User avatar
gardening_guru
Site Admin
 
Posts: 222
Joined: 29 Nov 2005 13:19
Location: Cambridgeshire, UK

Re: Strawberry planting and feeding

Postby davidaaren » 16 Feb 2012 17:14

Excellent effort in this site i read it thoroughly and got it mind and also adopt this information for our business
this information gives me a lots of knowledge your information extra guidance about the future
work ....thanks for share me...
davidaaren
Clean Hands
 
Posts: 1
Joined: 16 Feb 2012 17:12

Re: Strawberry planting and feeding

Postby HenryDough » 05 Oct 2012 11:46

Strawberry plants are best for kitchen gardening. They look great and gives feel of freshness to your surroundings. We should always keep an eye whether there is well drained, sandy loam with a soil pH from 5.8 to 6.2. Also it needs full sun.
User avatar
HenryDough
Clean Hands
 
Posts: 1
Joined: 05 Oct 2012 11:34
Location: 6103 W Juniper Ave,Branford, FL 32132


Return to Kitchen Gardening

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 19 guests