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Old 12-06-2005, 12:53 AM
TQ
 
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"Steve" wrote in message
...
Kenneth wrote:

On Sun, 05 Jun 2005 10:22:57 -0400, Steve
wrote:


Kenneth wrote:


On Sat, 4 Jun 2005 20:54:37 -0400, "TQ" ToweringQs AT
adelphia.net wrote:



"Steve" wrote in message
...


Kenneth wrote:


Howdy,

I have a bed with several variety of apparently healthy
strawberry plants but they have produced few flowers.

Are soil nutrients the likely culprit? If so, which one(s)?

Thanks for any help,


Have you been growing these for a while... a few years? Did they do
better the first year of two? Have you let them get too crowded?


When did the first few flowers appear? The plants don't all flower at

once.

Did you fertilize them last fall? If so, how much nitrogen did they

get?
Too much N can inhibit flowering.

Or what Steve said. Maybe it's time to rejuve the bed with new

plants.



Hello again,

Do you know the relationship between nitrogen content and
the tendency of the plants to throw off runners? In the
three years, I have (essentially) the number of plants that
I started with.

Thanks again,

Nitrogen would encourage more runners. If you are getting few flowers
AND few runners, something must be wrong. You didn't answer my question
about whether they produced better before this year. Is the soil really
bad where they are growing or something? What was growing there before?

Steve



Hi Steve,

Few runners, and few flowers on otherwise healthy looking
plants. No, they did not do any better in years 1 or 2. And
finally, this was just untended meadow before I turned it
into the strawberry patch.

Does my situation sound like nitrogen depletion?

Thanks for any further thoughts,



Sorry to say, I'm running out of further thoughts. It doesn't seem like
only nitrogen depletion would cause this, especially if the plants
really look healthy. You said you had several varieties so I can't think
a different variety would solve anything. If it was a meadow before,
then I assume the area gets full sun. OK, I'm stumped.
If you are in the US your county probably has a county extension office.
If someone here doesn't come up with an idea for you, maybe you should
call the extension office and run it by someone there. They may have
insight into a local problem that nobody else would think of. Let us
know if anything comes from that.

Steve


Are they June-bearers or everbearing?

Everbearing produce few runners. They are small plants and produce few
flowers and fruits.