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Strawberries
Strawberries
Q. Last spring I purchased several strawberry
plants (Ozark Everbearing) and a terra-cotta
strawberry jar. The plants seemed to do
well and we had a few strawberries. Most
of the plants lived through the winter.
Now we have seemingly healthy plants (very
green nice foliage runners everywhere) but
not a single blossom therefore no berries.
I live in central Ohio. Help!
A. I suggest you check the soil pH
your soil watering and fertilizing habits and the depth of the plants. Read on: Fragaria x ananassa 'Everbearing Ozark' - Everbearing Ozark Strawberry Ozark Beauty (Red Rich x Twentieth Century)
originated with J.B. Winn of Arkansas. Introduced 1955 for its runner-plant production attractive
sweet good-flavored berries. Mother plant very productive runner plants usually produce no berries. The garden standard! Popular everbearer strawberries
famous for large yields of bright red unusually large berries. Bright scarlet flesh is firm and fine-grained
holds up well when frozen. Day-neutral plants set delicious strawberry fruit from June throughout Sept. Zones 4 to 9.
The shallow root system of the strawberry
makes the everbearing sorts which ripen
in mid- and late summer when the transpiration
rate is high especially subject to drought
injury. Often before the plants recover
from one hot drought period another occurs
to check growth and fruit production. The
production of fruit over a long period also
requires a fertile soil high in nitrogen.
Because the flower clusters develop from
buds in leaf axils in place of runners everbearing
sorts are shy runner producers. For these
reasons everbearers are successful only
where the rainfall is ample and the soil
is fertile in northern United States and
Canada and at high elevations in the Appalachians
of North Carolina.
Experts recommend testing soil pH levels approximately six months before planting strawberries. Normal soil pH levels should be between 5.5 and 6.5
and if levels are too dolomitic lime can be added to the soil until the proper levels are reached. The crowns of the plants must be above the soil line
so check to see if planted too deep.
Strawberry plants are not deep-rooted and
since they cannot tolerate drought conditions
during times of drought they should be watered
enough to moisten the soil 6-8" below
ground once a week. It is recommended fertilizing
the strawberry plants halfway through the
growing season.
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