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Strawberries
Home-grown, vine-ripened
strawberries are among the garden's supreme treats- sweet,
succulent, and bursting with flavor. Serve them in shortcakes,
blended into smoothies, on ice cream, in cheesecakes or crepes,
topped with yogurt or whipped cream, or simply savor them "as
is" fresh from the garden. Grocery store strawberries, which
are harvested early and ripened off the vine, can't begin to
compare in sweetness and flavor.
Strawberries are also easy to grow in the home garden. The
plants form foot-wide mounds of lush dark green foliage that
can serve as an attractive ground cover. They require no
staking or training, as do the larger berries, and only basic
care. Once planted they will spread and continue to produce for
four or five years before they need to be replaced.
Strawberry plants also grow well in pots, patio planters, even
in
hanging planters. While there are many varieties of
strawberries, there are basically only two types: June-bearing
(Allstar) and Everbearing (Ozark and Quinalt). The June-bearing
strawberries bloom in the spring and produce a plentiful crop
that ripens during June. The Everbearing strawberries produce
both a spring and a fall crop, and continue producing some
berries throughout the summer, more when temperatures aren't
too hot. For the home gardener, the
best strategy is to plant both types and harvest ripe berries
over a long season.
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