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Old 22-05-2007, 04:59 PM posted to rec.gardens
jj jj is offline
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Default New Growth on Strawberry Plants

On May 21, 2:25 pm, Pennyaline wrote:
jj wrote:
On May 20, 10:16 pm, Charles wrote:
On 20 May 2007 18:00:28 -0700, jj wrote:


http://www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/PMG/selec...trawberry.html


I would like to here more about water lilies and salvia planted in a
bed, that sounds strange to me.


The water lillies are in square holes lined with pond liner. Watering
spikes keep enough water in them. They do not bloom as well on the
east side as they do in the pond. Easter lillies and rain lillies are
in the same bed too. I put whatever I want that will grow in that
exposure, bell peppers, tomatoes, eggplant, etc. I planted salvia in
that bed just because it stays colorful so long. (It spreads like mint
and has to be cut back and pulled out every year.) Two magnolias and
an Oriental orchid provide a little morning shade too. I've been
experimenting in that spot for 30 yrs. this mo.


I grow strawberries in Utah. They do well here with eastern exposure
full sun and heavy PM shade, but they also do well in western exposure
partial sun. I cannot grow them in beds with anything else. They spread
and sprawl and are unfriendly to companion plantings that are not their
daughters.

I've never seen what you describe happening in your berryplants. You
say this is happening to new leaf growth from the crown, but that theplantsare still daughtering? Have berries come on yet?

How old are yourplants, and for how long have they been in their
location? They may just be old and nonbearing at this point.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Penny, My plants have berried this season and have blossoms now. It's
about half the new leaf growth that's being affected. Yes, they are
still putting our runners (baby plants) although not too many right
now. I don't let my berries spread. I keep them on top of a row with
the plants about eighteen inches apart at the center. I 'stick' new
plants until they have nice roots and then transplant them. I've been
growing them for many years here, but I remove old plants about every
five years or so. I find I get lots of leaves and no berries if they
get older. I grew up on a strawberry farm in Louisiana, and this
problem is a new one for me. Last evening, I brought in cups full of
dirt from around a few plants and inspected it under a lens, nothing.
This morning I moved the straw back about four inches, so I'll be able
to see if there is something going on like silme or trails in the
soil, shouldn't be, but who knows. BTW, I've not noticed any of the
runner plants being bothered, it's growth from the crown.

Thanks for the web site Charles, lots of good info; but I didn't
recognize any of the diseases shown. Is there a pest out there that
can suck the life from the stem and not cut it off?