Growing Strawberries: The Globe and Mail

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Like last year, I will be putting together a series of edible gardening articles (writing and photography) for the Globe & Mail that will be published in both the national portion of the printed paper and online every other Saturday until fall. The following, on growing strawberries is my first article of this season. If you’d like to see what I wrote last year, it looks like articles have been archived on the Globe and Mail website (scroll down the page to the title “How to Grow Veggies”).

While I’m being self-promotional: My next Toronto-based workshop (and likely my last until the fall.), “Growing Tomatoes in Containers” is this coming Saturday and there is still one or two spaces left.

The Summer 2010 issue of Country Gardens Magazine (which I love because my gardens are about as urban as one can get) has an interview with me in their “Over the Garden Gate” feature. Hello, if you have come from this mag!

Edible Toronto also recently featured a really lovely piece on Grow Great Grub that includes a photo of me in/on my roof garden taken by Laura Berman.

The talented and prolific Julie Jackson (of Subversive Cross Stitch and Kitty Wigs) recently interviewed me for her Craft magazine column Subversive Finds.

Okay, enough of that. Here’s the article.

Next week I will post a strawberry/herb container planting that didn’t make it into the newspaper or online versions.

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First published in Saturday’s Globe and Mail (Friday, May. 21, 2010.)

The Real Dirt: Bigger isn’t better when it comes to strawberries

A really good or even decent strawberry needs to be slow-ripened in the sun: They are literally tiny buttons of distilled sunshine. This is why the store-bought imposters, picked while still under-ripe to maximize time on the shelf, will never pass.

Fortunately, strawberries are probably the easiest fruit crop to grow. Anyone with a small patch of sun, whether it touches down on a backyard, a front stoop or a window ledge, can grow a little taste of summer. Individual strawberry plants are generally pretty small, with shallow root systems. As a result, they’re adaptable to growing in tight spaces and even smaller containers where few other fruits will thrive. I once grew a strawberry plant in a repurposed soup can. Sure, it produced only a couple of berries, but by God they were delicious little morsels — and better to have a taste of the good stuff than none at all.

Growing up in the fruit belt of Ontario, I was under the mistaken impression that all strawberries were the same: the bigger the better. But it turns out that the tiny, wild types are superior when it comes to taste. It’s as if all of the flavour of a big berry is super-concentrated and then jammed into a smaller package. Wild strawberries (Fragaria vesca) and their cultivated cousins, known as alpines or frais des bois, last forever in the garden too, while the gigantic hybrids (Fragaria x ananassa) tend to fizzle out and stop producing after a few years. Of the hybrids, try a day-neutral variety that will set fruit throughout the growing season (‘Seascape’ is one) or ‘Mara des Bois’ for a flavour and fragrance bred to compete with wild types. For something decorative, choose varieties that have colourful flowers — such as ‘Lipstick’ and ‘Pink Panda’ — rather than the typical white.

To get ripe berries this season, buy a hanging basket of mature plants that will be ready for picking through the summer. To grow a long-term crop, begin in the spring with mature bare rootstock or leafy plants — don’t bother with seed unless you want to grow a big crop of alpines. Dig the plants in so that the crown (where the leaves meet the roots) is just above the soil line. If it’s too deep, the crown will rot; if it’s too high, it will dry out.

Strawberries require a bright and sunny spot with excellent drainage — they are one of a few edibles that will thrive in moderately sandy soil. In a less than sunny spot, try the ‘Mignonette’ variety, an alpine that turns out loads of charming, pointy little fruit set against toothy, ornamental leaves.

More important than sun, strawberries grow best when the soil is kept moist, but not soggy. Lay a thick blanket of straw mulch around the plants to moderate the soil moisture and keep weeds out. Add a little bit of compost at planting time but don’t overdo it with fertilizer or you’ll end up with boring, bland berries.

Except for alpines, all strawberry plants reproduce aggressively by setting off tiny plantlets known as runners. Come fall, you can encourage runners to take root and quickly double your initial investment with a bigger crop next year. Keep your plants alive through the winter by tucking them in with a new blanket of straw. Shallow window-box plants probably won’t survive, but you can transfer them to the garden or into much deeper planter boxes or plastic pots and repot next spring.

Gayla Trail
Gayla is a writer, photographer, and former graphic designer with a background in the Fine Arts, cultural criticism, and ecology. She is the author, photographer, and designer of best-selling books on gardening, cooking, and preserving.

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5 thoughts on “Growing Strawberries: The Globe and Mail

  1. Great piece Gayla! And timely too, we’ve been waffling about growing strawberries, feeling like we have no place to put them. I think they’d be gorgeous in the window boxes on the front of our house, do you think there would be a flavour issue mixing them with the chives that are already there? How deep of a pot do you think they should be transferred into for the winter?

    Congratulations on all your recent press! It makes me smile, keep up the fantastic work!

  2. Jennifer: I grow mine right next to garlic chives and onions at my community plot and have never had any issues with the strawberries tasting funny. I think it just gives them a bit of extra bad bug protection.

    Overwintering: I think the shallowest pot I have attempted was about 12″ but the deepest you can provide is better. The year I successfully overwintered in that pot was a mild one.

  3. If I remember correctly from “Carrots Love Tomatoes”, plants in the onion family are known to be good companions for strawberries.

    What about harvesting in the first year the plants are grown? Does this hinder them in the future? Is it better to let them have a year to establish?

  4. Gayla – love your website. Wondering if you could post a couple of go to places for the Mignonette in Toronto? I have always wanted to plant berries but we are in a shady spot here in the east end with some sun throughout the day on our front & back porches. Also speaking of sources, do you have a couple of great sources for seeds & seedlings? I usually hit the local garden centers (to find something interesting but not usually possible) but usually I have to rely on mail-order (Salt Spring Seeds & Urban Harvest) seeds… which I hate to admit – but have not been terribly successful with.

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