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Old 04-06-2014, 12:21 AM posted to rec.gardens
David Hare-Scott[_2_] David Hare-Scott[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Sep 2008
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Default Strawberry runners

Higgs Boson wrote:
On Thursday, May 29, 2014 12:18:39 PM UTC-7, Higgs Boson wrote:
On Wednesday, May 28, 2014 10:59:05 PM UTC-7, David Hare-Scott wrote:

Higgs Boson wrote:




Late with everything this year, so bought some strawberry plants.








2 Sequoia ever-bearing (I think) - standard here in So. Calif.



2 .June bearing. Nursery guy said not limited to June in this


climate.
The Junies have runners galore. I was taught that one should cut
off

the runners for plant to retain "strength", and that runners could be
planted to get new plant.Or should I plant them far apart so
runners can root themselves?


Nursery guy thought don't cut off runners. Does he know what he's
talking about?


Yes. Allow space for them to expand, spread the runners outwards
from the


crowns and after a year or two you will have 3-4 times as many
plants.


Makes sense. Ta'


In the interests of saving time, here's a (possibly naive) question:

I spread small bark ground cover between plants. Usual reason:
conserve water.
With the drought that CA is facing, and with our horrendous water
prices, this become even more important.

BUT: Will that stop runners from rooting? Or will they find their
way through the ground cover? I don't want to find out months later
that they can't root. Should I "engineer" bare ground patches where
runner is heading? Anybody dealt with this dilemma?

TIA


The runners will probably get through and root themselves unless your bark
is very thick. If you want to help them every few weeks go around and bury
any that are running on the surface.

D