Strawberry Growing Tips

How Are Strawberries Grown

How Are Strawberries Grown


 

Strawberries are right up there in popularity with apples, oranges, and bananas. People love them fresh, in jam and jelly, frozen, and piled in desserts. A question that is not so often considered is: how are strawberries grown?

Where do the strawberries at the store come from? Do most people buy them from a local strawberry patch, or grow strawberries on their own? Would more people grow them if they knew how to? There are more health benefits to homegrown strawberries than store bought, just as with any other fresh fruit or vegetable.

So how are strawberries grown? Would people grow them in their own gardens if they knew how to do so? Why isn't the taste of sweet strawberries enough to get gardeners to enjoy the satisfaction of growing them?

There are generally two types of strawberries. Standard berries are generally used for making jams or freezing because they produce a large crop at once. And Everbearing berries which will produce a slow and steady crop throughout the summer which are great for making homemade desserts or snacking.

There are many different varieties of strawberries, some produce larger size fruit and other smaller fruit.

Where you live and depending on the winters in your area can determine how the strawberries are grown. Cold and hrash winters mean planting in the early spring. For warmer climates, planting in the fall will ensure the first crop will appear in spring.

Pinching off the first flower buds will give the plants a chance to grow and mature, enabling them to produce better fruit. There are different suggestions for how they are grown. Some recommend mounds and others recommend rows.

They must be kept well watered, with good, clean soil, and they must be fed in order to produce quality fruit. Weeds need to be kept away also.

Summaring our answer to the question, how are strawberries grown?

With tender care, lots of attention, water, food, and clean soil. Much of the same types of elements that it takes to grow anything else. Time, effort, and patience are always key ingredients for growing anything. For even more helpful hints, search the web or talk to local people in your community.

 

 

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