Take your strawberry growing to the next level with variety selection, propagation methods, bed renovation, and techniques for extending your harvest season.
Sarah Green
Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.
Introduction
You've grown strawberries successfully and want to maximize your harvests. This intermediate guide covers advanced variety selection, propagation techniques, bed management, pest and disease control, and season extension methods.
Advanced Variety Selection
Understanding Photoperiodic Response
Strawberry varieties respond differently to day length (photoperiod):
| Type | Flowering Trigger | Temperature Range | Production Pattern |
|---|---|---|---|
| June-bearing (short-day) | Days <12 hours | Any | Single large crop |
| Day-neutral | Independent of day length | 40-85°F | Continuous when mild |
| Everbearing | Long days + short days | Variable | Spring + fall crops |
Regional Variety Recommendations
Cold Climates (Zones 3-5):
- June-bearing: 'Earliglow', 'Honeoye', 'Jewel', 'Cavendish'
- Day-neutral: 'Albion', 'Seascape' (with protection)
- Look for: Cold hardiness, disease resistance
Moderate Climates (Zones 6-7):
- June-bearing: 'Allstar', 'Chandler', 'Jewel'
- Day-neutral: 'Albion', 'San Andreas', 'Monterey'
- Look for: Balanced performance, disease resistance
Warm Climates (Zones 8-10):
- Day-neutral: 'Albion', 'San Andreas', 'Sweet Ann'
- Short-day: 'Chandler', 'Camarosa', 'Camino Real'
- Look for: Low chill requirement, heat tolerance
Disease Resistance by Variety
| Variety | Type | Verticillium | Phytophthora | Anthracnose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albion | Day-neutral | Resistant | Resistant | Tolerant |
| San Andreas | Day-neutral | Tolerant | Resistant | Tolerant |
| Sweet Ann | Day-neutral | Tolerant | Tolerant | Susceptible |
| Chandler | June-bearing | Susceptible | Tolerant | Tolerant |
| Earliglow | June-bearing | Resistant | Tolerant | Susceptible |
Propagation Methods
Runner Propagation
Strawberries naturally propagate through runners (stolons):
Process:
- Identify healthy mother plants with desirable traits
- Allow runners to develop in mid-summer
- Pin down runner tips when small leaves appear
- Keep soil moist around developing daughter plants
- Sever from mother plant after 4-6 weeks (when rooted)
- Transplant to new location
Tips for success:
- Use only the first 1-2 daughter plants per runner (strongest)
- Select disease-free mother plants
- Root into small pots for easier transplanting
- Take only 4-6 runners per mother plant
Division
For clump-forming varieties or crowded plants:
- Dig up entire plant in early spring or fall
- Separate into individual crowns with roots
- Each division needs at least one growing point
- Replant immediately at same depth
- Water well and keep moist
Tissue Culture (Advanced)
Commercial nurseries use tissue culture for disease-free plants. Home gardeners should purchase certified disease-free plants from reputable nurseries.
Bed Management Systems
Matted Row System
Best for: June-bearing varieties
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Initial spacing | 18-24" in row, 3-4' between rows |
| Runner management | Allow runners to fill row to 18" wide |
| Renovation | Annual after harvest |
| Lifespan | 3-5 years before replanting |
Advantages: Less labor, natural bed filling Disadvantages: Smaller berries, more disease pressure
Hill System (Raised Beds)
Best for: Day-neutral and everbearing
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Bed dimensions | 6-8" high, 24-36" wide |
| Spacing | 10-12" between plants |
| Runner management | Remove all runners |
| Renovation | Replace plants every 2-3 years |
Advantages: Larger berries, better disease control, easier harvest Disadvantages: More labor, need to replace plants
Annual Hill System
Best for: Warm climates (Zones 9-10)
- Plant new transplants each fall
- Harvest through winter and spring
- Remove plants in summer heat
- Start fresh with new plants in fall
Bed Renovation (June-Bearers)
Renovation rejuvenates June-bearing beds after harvest:
Timing: Immediately after last harvest (late June/July)
Steps:
- Mow or cut foliage to 2-3 inches above crowns
- Narrow rows to 8-12 inches using rototiller or hoe
- Thin plants to 4-6 inches apart within rows
- Apply fertilizer (1-2 lbs 10-10-10 per 100 sq ft)
- Water thoroughly and irrigate during dry periods
- Allow regrowth for fall flower bud development
Why renovate?
- Removes old, disease-prone foliage
- Stimulates new growth
- Reduces overcrowding
- Extends bed life to 4-5 years
Pest Management
Spider Mites
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Identification | Yellow stippling on leaves; fine webbing |
| Conditions | Hot, dry weather |
| Prevention | Adequate irrigation; avoid water stress |
| Biological control | Predatory mites (Neoseiulus californicus) |
| Chemical control | Insecticidal soap; miticides if severe |
Tarnished Plant Bug
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Identification | Deformed, "cat-faced" fruit |
| Damage | Feeds on developing flowers |
| Prevention | Remove weeds (alternate hosts) |
| Biological control | Beauveria bassiana (fungal pathogen) |
| Monitoring | White sticky traps; visual inspection |
Spotted Wing Drosophila
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Identification | Soft spots in ripe fruit; small flies |
| Damage | Larvae feed inside fruit |
| Prevention | Harvest frequently; remove overripe fruit |
| Traps | Apple cider vinegar traps for monitoring |
| Control | Fine mesh exclusion netting |
Slugs and Snails
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Identification | Slime trails; holes in fruit |
| Conditions | Wet weather; heavy mulch |
| Prevention | Drip irrigation; clean cultivation |
| Barriers | Copper tape; diatomaceous earth |
| Traps | Beer traps; citrus rind traps |
Disease Management
Gray Mold (Botrytis)
| Aspect | Management |
|---|---|
| Cause | Botrytis cinerea fungus |
| Conditions | Wet, humid weather |
| Cultural control | Good spacing; straw mulch; remove infected fruit |
| Organic options | Bacillus subtilis products |
| Chemical control | Fungicide rotation (FRAC groups) |
Anthracnose
| Aspect | Management |
|---|---|
| Cause | Colletotrichum species |
| Conditions | Warm (75-82°F), wet weather |
| Cultural control | Disease-free transplants; remove infected plants |
| Resistant varieties | Albion, San Andreas |
| Prevention | Avoid overhead irrigation; good drainage |
Verticillium Wilt
| Aspect | Management |
|---|---|
| Cause | Verticillium dahliae (soilborne) |
| Symptoms | Wilting; brown leaf margins; death |
| Prevention | Don't plant after tomatoes, peppers, potatoes |
| Rotation | Broccoli rotation can reduce soil levels |
| Resistant varieties | Earliglow, Albion, San Andreas |
Phytophthora Crown/Root Rot
| Aspect | Management |
|---|---|
| Cause | Phytophthora species |
| Conditions | Poor drainage; wet soil |
| Prevention | Raised beds; good drainage |
| Resistant varieties | Albion, Victor, San Andreas |
Fertility Management
Nutrient Requirements
| Nutrient | Function | Deficiency Signs |
|---|---|---|
| Nitrogen | Leaf growth | Pale leaves; weak growth |
| Phosphorus | Root development; flowering | Purple leaves; poor fruiting |
| Potassium | Fruit quality; disease resistance | Leaf edge browning |
| Calcium | Cell wall strength | Tip burn |
| Boron | Fruit development | Deformed fruit |
Fertilization Schedule
| Timing | Application | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| At planting | Balanced fertilizer (10-10-10) | 1-2 lbs/100 sq ft |
| After renovation | Balanced fertilizer | 1-2 lbs/100 sq ft |
| Late summer | Low-nitrogen | Promotes flower buds |
| Fall | Avoid excess N | Improves winter hardiness |
Caution: Excess nitrogen = lots of leaves, few berries, more disease.
Season Extension
Early Season
| Method | Temperature Gain | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Row covers | +4-8°F | Remove when flowering (bees needed) |
| Low tunnels | +10-15°F | Vent on warm days |
| Plastic mulch | +5°F soil temp | Black for cool areas; white for warm |
Late Season
| Method | Purpose | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Row covers | Frost protection | Apply when temps <32°F |
| Day-neutral varieties | Natural late production | Continue until hard freeze |
| High tunnels | Extended season | Can harvest into November |
Winter Protection (Cold Climates)
| Step | Timing | Method |
|---|---|---|
| Clean up | After hard frost | Remove dead leaves |
| Mulch application | Temps consistently below 20°F | 3-4" clean straw |
| Mulch removal | Early spring | When new growth starts |
Record Keeping
Track for each bed/variety:
- Variety and source
- Planting date
- Fertilizer applications
- Pest/disease observations
- Harvest dates and yields
- Winter survival rates
Conclusion
Mastering strawberry production requires understanding variety selection, proper bed management, and proactive pest and disease control. With these intermediate techniques, you can maximize yields, extend your harvest season, and maintain productive beds for years.
Ready for more? Our Advanced Guide covers intensive production systems, integrated pest management, and commercial-scale techniques.
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