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10 strawberry garden ideas
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If your strawberry garden needs some innovation, try some of these fun strawberry garden ideas. Implement a DIY vertical planter or add some variety to your strawberry patch with different species.
Check out these easy and useful strawberry planter ideas!
Plant a strawberry pot
Potted plants can make great additions to an indoor gardening space!
If you have never seen one before, a strawberry pot is a ceramic or clay pot with multiple small holes around the exterior. Strawberries can find the holes and grow through them.
The fruit then hangs from each hole, giving them more space to grow than in a traditional pot. Growing strawberries in strawberry planters also looks cooler and is far easier.
These strawberry pots are also great for succulents, herbs, vines, and flowers! Check them out in this post.
Just add some potting soil, organic fertilizer and your strawberry seeds, and let them do the rest.
You can find a strawberry seed pack at a garden center or grocer. You’ll have strawberry seedlings in no time.
Plant a June-bearing strawberry variety area
June-bearing strawberries are usually planted 4 feet apart in neat rows. Each strawberry plant is spaced out about 18 inches.
The best way to keep the fruit from touching the soil is to lay mulch down under and around the plants. This also helps keep weeds down and retain soil moisture.
Growing strawberries doesn’t take much skill, so having these June-bearing fruits in your strawberry beds will be a breeze.
These wild strawberries work well in small garden spaces as well as larger ones. Enjoy growing strawberries of this variety in your garden.
Plant an everbearing strawberry variety area
The overbearing plants produce fruit 2 to 3 times a year, giving you plenty of strawberries to work with. You’ll be able to make strawberry smoothies and strawberry shortcake for longer periods each year.
Although this plant produces strawberries a few times a year, it isn’t the easiest to grow strawberries. Growing strawberries should be done with thorough research.
However, a basic detail to remember is that they should be grown in a 6 by 6 inch hole for shallow rooting with well placed landscape fabric. Here’s a brief guide to different types of strawberries.
Use alpine strawberries as groundcover
This little woodland strawberry or fraises des bois has sweet white blossoms.
The little scarlett colored strawberries appear shortly after the blossoms and provide cheerful edging to steps, gardens, and tall fences.
Alpine strawberries are great paired with forget-me-nots, making the ground appear red, white, blue, and green.
It’s a lovely sight if you have a space of ground you want to add color to.
Note that alpine strawberries will take advantage of space, so you might be growing strawberries across gravel or into areas of garden beds that you may not want them.
They also great to be planted around a fruit tree. Just remember, that while they do well in shade but prefer more sun to create more fruit.
Add some white strawberries
If you enjoy growing things that aren’t their usual color, grow white strawberries in your garden. They are much smaller than regular strawberries but are just as aromatic and delicious.
One benefit of white strawberries is that they are non-invasive. This means that you will only have berries where you plant them. You can plant them around other fruit trees, planters or within your existing strawberry patch.
The plants are ever-bearing, producing fruit all summer long.
They stop producing when the first frost hits in the fall. While they don’t put out a ton of fruit, they provide enough sweet berries for tasty treats.
Fun fact: strawberries weren’t originally red; humans cultivated them to be red over time.
Since animals are conditioned to look for ripe red fruit, they often don’t recognize the white berries as ripe and will leave them alone.
Create a strawberry tower
Strawberry towers are vertical planters and are built in many different ways. You can also buy them at your local nursery premade.
The purpose of the DIY strawberry tower is to elevate the strawberry plants so they don’t take up much ground. They’re perfect for a compact space.
The tower is also easier on your back while picking the berries because you aren’t crouched over.
Some people build their DIY strawberry tower out of buckets, crates, scrap wood, planter boxes, or multiple strawberry planters.
There’s no wrong way to do it, so get creative with the materials you find and have fun.
The tiered strawberry planter will be a fun addition to your garden. It’s a successful strawberry planter that many gardeners use.
Check out these 20+ DIY Strawberry planter ideas that you can use in your garden.
Create a tasting buffet of different labeled strawberry varieties
Among the different types of strawberries are June-bearing, ever-bearing, and day-neutral varieties.
Create a tasting buffet of different varieties in your garden and then display those same varieties when you host guests. Make adorable little labels to tell on-lookers which strawberries they are looking at.
Here are several different varieties you may enjoy planting and tasting:
- Jewel Strawberry plants
- Chandler Strawberry plants
- White Strawberry plants
- Selva Strawberry plants
- Caramosa Strawberry plants
- Moxie Strawberry plants
- Royal Royce Strawberry plants
- Valiant Strawberry plants
- Honeoye Strawberry plants
- Quinault Strawberry plants
- Ozark Beauty Strawberry plants
- Seascape Strawberry plants
- Eversweet Strawberry
Plant strawberries in a raised bed
If you have clay or sandy soil, it might be a good idea to plant your strawberries in a raised strawberry bed. Many gardeners use cedar boards or cinder blocks to raise their beds.
A wooden strawberry planter is easy to put up on raised beds. Make sure to place some landscape fabric prior to planting strawberries!
Add some companion plants
As you plant various fruits and vegetables, pay attention to what grows well beside them and how they can mutually benefit one another.
Some great edible companion plants for strawberries are asparagus, peas, beans, lettuce, spinach, garlic, horseradish, perennial plants and rhubarb. Flowers that do well near strawberries are marigolds!
Avoid planting tomatoes, eggplant, potatoes, melons, peppers, roses, mint, and okra near your strawberry planter. These plants may contribute to diseases that affect strawberries.
Make your own DIY strawberry planter
Some of the cutest DIY strawberry planters are hung from a post or balcony. Try making your own DIY hanging strawberry planter to grow strawberries. There are so many DIY strawberry planter ideas online, just search and see what you come up with.
Nurseries have pre-made hanging baskets, but you can also make your own out of buckets, plastic bottles, crates, and more. Hanging baskets are such an easy way to grow strawberries.
Other ideas include a tiered planter, nursery posts, hanging containers, a vertical strawberry tube planter, a wooden strawberry planter, a DIY tiered strawberry planter, a laundry basket, a plastic tub or a strawberry pallet planter.
For even more planter ideas, try DIY wooden pallets, a DIY strawberry planter, a hanging basket, hanging strawberry planters, a DIY hanging strawberry planter, a terracotta pot, or plastic bottles!
If you’re tight on space make sure to research pvc pipes. There are tons of great ideas out there to grow delicious berries.
No matter how you plant your little red fruits, you’ll be able to enjoy fresh strawberries throughout the spring and summer months.
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