Help with strawberries
At the end of August, the strawberries having finished fruiting, and the
leaves looking a bit on the sorry side, I cut back all the growth and thought that the plants were now prepared for next years growth. They are now as large and leafy as they were before I cut them back. Do I cut them back again? Thanks for any response. Dave Henry. |
Dave Henry wrote:
: At the end of August, the strawberries having finished fruiting, and : the leaves looking a bit on the sorry side, I cut back all the growth : and thought that the plants were now prepared for next years growth. : They are now as large and leafy as they were before I cut them back. : Do I cut them back again? : : Thanks for any response. : : Dave Henry. that's the trouble doing things by the book lol. I wouldn't trim at all but now I would just leave them be |
Dave Henry wrote or quoted:
At the end of August, the strawberries having finished fruiting, and the leaves looking a bit on the sorry side, I cut back all the growth and thought that the plants were now prepared for next years growth. They are now as large and leafy as they were before I cut them back. Do I cut them back again? Excuse my ignorance - but I thought you cut off the runners - and left everything else alone. Why would cutting off the leaves be a good idea? Wouldn't that just hamper the plant's development? -- __________ |im |yler http://timtyler.org/ Remove lock to reply. |
Tim Tyler wrote:
: Dave Henry wrote or quoted: : :: At the end of August, the strawberries having finished fruiting, and :: the leaves looking a bit on the sorry side, I cut back all the :: growth and thought that the plants were now prepared for next years :: growth. They are now as large and leafy as they were before I cut :: them back. Do I cut them back again? : : Excuse my ignorance - but I thought you cut off the runners - and left : everything else alone. : : Why would cutting off the leaves be a good idea? Wouldn't that just : hamper the plant's development? The experts say that cutting off the foliage at the end of the season helps to stop any disease etc., taking a hold, but I'm with you on this one |
Dave Henry wrote:
At the end of August, the strawberries having finished fruiting, and the leaves looking a bit on the sorry side, I cut back all the growth and thought that the plants were now prepared for next years growth. They are now as large and leafy as they were before I cut them back. Do I cut them back again? Dave, Don't do anything to them now. The increasingly cold weather will stop any further growth, and they'll be ready to get away as soon as the weather warms up next year. I deal with my strawberries this way, and they produce good crops. Sarah |
"Robert" wrote in message ... Tim Tyler wrote: : Dave Henry wrote or quoted: : :: At the end of August, the strawberries having finished fruiting, and :: the leaves looking a bit on the sorry side, I cut back all the Snip The experts say that cutting off the foliage at the end of the season helps to stop any disease etc., taking a hold, but I'm with you on this one Thanks Robert. Being new to strawberries, I must admit I went by the book, on the basis of - "When in doubt, look it up". In future I will consult the newsgroup. Thanks again. Dave. |
Janet Baraclough.. wrote or quoted:
You do cut off runners, but it's also common practice to burn, or cut off and remove, all that season's leaves in late summer (commercial growers often burn). It kills spores of botrytis and fungal infections, and removes most of the dead-leaf shelter where woodlice and slugs might over-winter/breed. Goodness! The only pest problem I /really/ know I have with old strawberry leaves is with a green silky leaf-curling caterpillar. I feel bad enough destroying the leaves thus infected. It would take some pretty dramatic signs of pests to make me torch whole plants! -- __________ |im |yler http://timtyler.org/ Remove lock to reply. |
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