This is a blog that Gardener Den created to teach and answer questions about gardening. He is going to ask other authors to give their opinions on gardening subjects and other expertise that they can write about gardening and their views on the political policies of todays world. These policies are effecting the Horticulture Industry in this country.
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
How to plant any type of strawberry plants June bearer or everbearing
How to Plant all types of Strawberry plants
Hi Gardening Friends!
Here is a article on how to plant Ozark Beauty Strawberries plants. But you can use this article to plant any kind of Strawberries. June or Everbearing Strawberries. Hope you try to plant and grow some strawberries in your garden. Enjoy!
Happy Gardening!
Gardener Den
Overview
Of all the fruit varieties that you can plant in your home garden, strawberries provide the most return for the least effort. Strawberry plants can be easily started in the home garden, require minimum space to grow and provide large yields a year after being planted. One of the more popular varieties of strawberries to plant are the Ozark beauty variety. Ozark beauty is an ever-bearing variety that produces crops in the early summer and the fall.
Step 1
Test your soil's pH with a home testing kit six months before planting by placing soil from your berry bed in the testing compartment. Fill the testing chamber with the liquid that comes with the test. When the liquid changes color, compare it with the color chart that comes with the test.
Step 2
Adjust the soil of your strawberry beds for growing Ozark beauty strawberries by mixing dolomitic lime or powdered sulfur to the bed up to change the pH. Dolomitic lime will raise the pH, while sulfur will lower it. Ozark beauty strawberries like a pH that ranges from 5.5 to 6.5. To mix soil amendments into a berry bed, spread the amendments over the top of the soil. Then mix them to a depth of 6 inches with a rototiller.
Step 3
Trim older leaves from strawberry plants with garden shears.
Step 4
Soak the roots of plants for one hour.
Step 5
Dig a planting hole with a garden trowel just deep enough that the crown of the plant is level with the surface of the soil.
Step 6
Place the strawberry's root ball in the planting hole. Cover with soil.
Step 7
Space the strawberry plants 1 foot apart in rows that are 1 foot apart.
Step 8
Dissolve 2 tbsp. of a balanced (10-10-10) fertilizer in 1 gallon of water. Apply 1 cup to each plant to help establish the plants.
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