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Polar
03-02-2003, 03:17 AM
My bare-roots finally arrived, yippee!

Have put them all in: 25 Quinault, 25 Ft. Laramie,
and am dying to see how they taste, after years of
buying whatever is on sale in local nurseries (mainly Sequoia)

Can't wait...!




--
Polar

Zphysics1
04-02-2003, 02:41 AM
<<
My bare-roots finally arrived, yippee!

Have put them all in: 25 Quinault, 25 Ft. Laramie,
and am dying to see how they taste, after years of
buying whatever is on sale in local nurseries (mainly Sequoia)

Can't wait...!




--
Polar





>>


I think you are near Roger's Garden in Newport Beach/Mission Viejo area. If you
are, try the alpine strawberries, Camarosa and Chandler.

/z.

Polar
04-02-2003, 07:18 AM
On 04 Feb 2003 02:41:53 GMT, (Zphysics1) wrote:

[...]

>I think you are near Roger's Garden in Newport Beach/Mission Viejo area. If you
>are, try the alpine strawberries, Camarosa and Chandler.

Well, not actually near; it's about 1-1/2 hours away, but thanks for
the info.

There's a Chandler "big" strawberry as well. Related?

I wouldn't mind trying alpines again. Last time I planted them,
quite a few years ago, they didn't do too well. Somebody told me they
were getting too much direct Western sun. True/False?





--
Polar

SugarChile
04-02-2003, 12:51 PM
"Polar" > wrote in message >
> I wouldn't mind trying alpines again. Last time I planted them,
> quite a few years ago, they didn't do too well. Somebody told me they
> were getting too much direct Western sun. True/False?

They're alpine! They moisture but sharp drainage, and the kind of partial
shade that a mountain understory plant would receive. They're more
adaptable than many alpine or rock plants, but direct Western sun sounds a
bit overwhelming.

They self-seed and volunteer a bit for me (always very welcome) and their
favorite places to show up are the cracks between the flagstones, which are
set in crushed gravel. They can take a lot more sun if their root run is
cool.

For those of you unfamiliar with them, alpine strawberries do NOT set
runners, making them ideal for borders and edgings. The strawberries are
borne in a flush in June, then sporadically until frost. They are smallish,
and never plentiful, but they are absolutely exquisite in flavor. There's a
yellow variety called 'pineapple crush' that I started from seed many years
ago--when they are dead ripe they are heaven on earth, with pineapple
overtones. The yellow varieties are supposed to be prone to bird damage,
but the birds have never bothered mine, red or yellow.

Cheers,
Sue

Zone 6, Southcentral PA

Paul England
08-02-2003, 08:24 PM
"Polar" > wrote in message
...
>
> My bare-roots finally arrived, yippee!
<Snip>
> buying whatever is on sale in local nurseries (mainly Sequoia)
>
> Can't wait...!

> Polar

Polar, I'm thinking of planting strawberries, for the first time this year.
How did you protect the Sequoia from fur and feathered visitors - come
ripening time ?

Regards ........ Paul

Polar
08-02-2003, 08:24 PM
On Sat, 8 Feb 2003 18:01:57 -0000, "Paul England" <firstplatz
@virgin.net> wrote:

>
>"Polar" > wrote in message
...
>>
>> My bare-roots finally arrived, yippee!
> <Snip>
>> buying whatever is on sale in local nurseries (mainly Sequoia)
>>
>> Can't wait...!
>
>> Polar
>
>Polar, I'm thinking of planting strawberries, for the first time this year.
>How did you protect the Sequoia from fur and feathered visitors - come
>ripening time ?
>
>Regards ........ Paul
>
With GREAT difficulty!

Only thing that could work is a covering or dome of some sort.

Some people use chicken wire, small mesh, and bend it into an arch or
whatever shape will fit your planting bed. Do NOT leave loose at the
edges or THEY will find a way in. Maybe not birds, since they don't
like to feel "trapped", but other critters could get in.

Others use the plastic sweet-pea netting, also small mesh. This MUST
be kept fairly tense, or it will sag and permit entry by our avian
and mammalian friends. Therefore it should be tightly attached to
fixed points around the bed.

Both chicken-wire and sweet-pea mesh should allow enough
overhead room for the plants to grow.

Maybe other gardeners will present alternative solutions.

Good luck and enjoy your strawberries.








--
Polar

Patskywriter
09-02-2003, 08:01 AM
wow! you're starting out with 50 plants? i started out with six and ended up
with DOZENS! hope you really like strawberries! :D

pat

Larry Blanchard
09-02-2003, 05:27 PM
In article >, "Paul
England" <firstplatz @virgin.net> says...
>
> Polar, I'm thinking of planting strawberries, for the first time this year.
> How did you protect the Sequoia from fur and feathered visitors - come
> ripening time ?
>
I use a 2' chicken wire fence with bird netting across the top. It's
worked so far for birds, rabbits, and skunks, but I doubt it'd slow down
a determined raccoon much.

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