First Harvest of the Year: The Wild Strawberry - and How to Propagate

in #gardening6 years ago (edited)

We have wild strawberry plants in the raised garden bed - in front of the cabin. The wild strawberry plants were one of the first signs of green that we saw this spring. They were also the first to produce fruit. Everyday this past week I have harvested ripe red wild strawberries. Last year they produced into fall, so there's a good chance that they will also be the last fruit to be harvested this year.

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Wild strawberries are smaller than most store bought strawberries, but they are packed with flavor. I usually eat more than a few in the morning, only half of the harvest makes it to the fridge.

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Growing New Wild Strawberry Plants

Most strawberry plants produce much less fruit after 5 years, so it's important for new strawberry plants to grow each year to replace the older strawberry plants. There are a couple easy ways to grow new strawberry plants - with runners or with seeds.

Growing New Strawberry Plants from Runners

Some strawberry plants don't send out runners, but wild strawberry plants do. You can see the old runners from last year in the picture below that was taken a few weeks ago.

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After the plant has established itself it will send above ground 'runners' that have nodes that new strawberry plants will start to grow from. In the picture below you can see I cut a small hole in the black garden fabric, placed the runner node onto the dirt through the cut hole, then placed a rock on either side of the node to hold it in place. A couple days after watering, roots will grow into the ground from the leaf node.

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The runner node can also be placed into a cup with dirt if you would like to easily transplant the new wild strawberry plant elsewhere.

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Growing New Strawberry Plants with Seeds from Last Year

Another great way to grow new wild strawberry plants is from seed. In the picture below you can see the strawberry that was left on the plant over the winter.

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Especially after being though the cold winter, those strawberry seeds were ready to plant. You can see the wild strawberry seedlings in the picture below from the wintered strawberry seeds that I planted two weeks ago.

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Wild Strawberry Transplanting

A few weeks ago there were wild strawberry plants near the shower bed that I wanted to move to the raised bed strawberry patch before they bloomed. Click the GIF below to watch the full wild strawberry transplanting video.

They were moved just in time - a week later the strawberry patch was full of blossoms and green strawberries.

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Below is a pair of pictures showing the wild strawberry raised garden bed in daily harvest mode.

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The Harvest

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I've found that fully ripe red strawberries easily pull off the plant. If the strawberry does not pull off easily, usually the backside is not quite ripe.

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The Wild Strawberries that I don't eat during harvest will be stored in a freezer until there is enough to make batch of strawberry jam.

Have a great day!

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We gt some great organic strawberries we're planting for the first year now. Gonna send this post over to my master gardener (my wife).

Ah very nice - strawberry's are givers. I'm the jack of all trades, master of some :)

Awesome. I love wild strawberries. And great for you. Lots of vitamin C and other good stuff. I've planted and watched them propagate with runners. And I've heard you need to keep a mix of mature plants and new ones from runners to keep the patch productive. I've never tried to start strawberries from seeds. Great post!

They say the strawberry puts out for a good 5 years, then the production really starts to diminish. Most of the runners they send out I let root in the bed. Wild strawberry seeds usually take a week or two to germinate, but it might be quicker for someone with a seed tray warmer, I just left mine outside in the shade - it's the right season.

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That's awesome - thanks @eco-alex and @ecotrain for the support, it's great to have friends to share these experiences with :)

Strawberries not quite ready around here. So living vicariously through your photos for now...

Enjoy :) When I was eating one I remembered how much strawberry's remind me of summer :)

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Looks pretty nice..... Not very often in U.K. you see wild strawbrerries now, Looks like a far cry from the bigger - plumper version in the Superstores....
Wonder how they would be if you combined them into a hybrid variety..
Anyway, nice plant and great eating i am sure.. (Food for free).

The Alpine strawberry variety is a little bigger and still has the great flavor - there's not much white, mostly red. A lot of my plants I'll be seed selecting for planting next year - I'll be selecting the ones that thrive in this climate and produce the best product :)

Thanks for sharing @jackdub! I have just started with my own fruits and veg this year in the back garden. Zucchini have already appeared but strawberries are just coming through in the UK. Will go picking at a local farm soon! I think yours are a little different in variety though. 🤔 Keep up the good work 🙂

Corr they look well tasty! We've got some seeded strawberries going from last year in our garden but the damn bindweed took over during winter and hasn't left many sadly. Its literally taking over everything, the lawn was mown 3 weeks ago and its already popped up and creeping everywhere.

Thanks for all the info, really interesting post, I wasn't aware of the fruit diminishing after 5 years or about the nodes so thanks for that.
hope you are enjoying your havest...i'm quite jealous!

That pretty nice one you have.
ive put one straberry plants in my garden 3 years ago about 12 inch by 12 inch... now i have a lot of them. that pretty nice how they propagate. also the raspberry propagate so quick i have a tons of them. the kids enjoy to catch them when they are ready . but watchout for spikes ! lol

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