Sunday, June 9, 2013

Strawberry Plants

Strawberry Plants & Freezing thumbnail

http://www.ehow.com/facts_5832466_strawberry-plants-freezing.html



Establish Your Plants

  • Be sure you have planted or transplanted your strawberry plants to give them enough time to establish a strong root system before frost and freezing arrives. Late summer or early fall are ideal times for planting or transplanting strawberry plants.

Location of your Strawberry Plants

  • Because strawberry blossoms are sensitive to frost and freezing, it is important to plant strawberries away from shallow or low-lying spots, where frost may occur.
  • As winter approaches and your strawberry plants stop producing fruit, prune off runners and late blossoms from the plants. By doing this, you are channeling the nutritional energy of your strawberry plants to the plant itself which strengthens it for winter.

Over the Winter

  • Before the first hard freeze in fall, cover your strawberry plants with a thick layer of at least four inches of mulch or clean straw. This will keep your strawberry plant roots protected from the cold by keeping the soil underneath the straw from freezing.

In the Spring

  • In the spring, as soon as the threat of frost has past and new leaves develop, remove the mulch or straw from your strawberry plants. Keep the mulch or straw close by to the plants in case an unexpected late frost should come so you can quickly cover your plants for blossom protection.


Read more: Strawberry Plants & Freezing | eHow http://www.ehow.com/facts_5832466_strawberry-plants-freezing.html#ixzz2Vhia52Mf

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