Strawberries
Earliglow Strawberry Plants
XF114
Fragaria x ananassa: Growing your own strawberries is fun, inexpensive, and easy. The earliest June bearing strawberry with top-notch, sweet, succulent flavor. While other early maturing strawberries tend to lack in flavor, Earliglow proves that great taste and early ripening can go hand in hand. Gorgeous, ruby-red fruit are firm with outstanding flavor and high yields for all your preserving and fresh eating enjoyment. Vigorous plants are resistant to red stele, root rot, and verticillium wilt.
Our Strawberry plants are shipped in mid-March. Order by March 1st for best availability. Complete growing instructions are included with each order.
PLEASE READ: Not available to US Territories or Canada.
More Strawberry Growing Information
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"Fragaria x ananassa: Growing your own strawberries is fun, inexpensive, and easy. The 2 major types of strawberries are June bearing and everbearing. June bearers give 1 large crop over a 2-3 week period in early summer, making them suitable for processing into jams, jellies, syrups, and more. The everbearers, especially day-neutral varieties like Tristar and Seascape, produce berries consistently from late spring through fall.
Strawberry plants are shipped in mid-March. Order by March 1st for best availability. Complete growing instructions are included with each order. Not available to US Territories or Canada. Plants are shipped bare root.
CULTURE: Strawberries do best in fertile, well-drained soil in full sun(except Woodland which prefers part shade to shade), and in an area of good air circulation. Can be grown in all areas of the US. Strawberry plants are shipped bare root and may be potted in a 3-4 inch pot and held for a few weeks if your garden is not ready. Prepare your beds by deeply digging in a layer of compost and about 5 pounds of bone meal for every 100 square feet. Plant 12 inches apart. Pinch off the runners to keep the original plants productive. For Woodland strawberries in particular, it is not necessary to pinch the runners if a groundcover effect is desired. Water regularly, using drip irrigation if possible. The first year that you plant a new patch of strawberries, pinch off the blossoms of everbearing varieties until July 1st. Pinch off the flowers of June bearing varieties the entire first year.
DISEASE AND INSECTS: Root weevils, aphids, and slugs are the main pests of strawberries. Consult your local county extension agent for the proper controls in your area. A good fall cleanup of pruning off old foliage and keeping weeds out will help eliminate disease problems. A change in location every 4 years, using new plants, is the best way to maintain a productive and healthy strawberry patch."
Strawberry plants are shipped in mid-March. Order by March 1st for best availability. Complete growing instructions are included with each order. Not available to US Territories or Canada. Plants are shipped bare root.
CULTURE: Strawberries do best in fertile, well-drained soil in full sun(except Woodland which prefers part shade to shade), and in an area of good air circulation. Can be grown in all areas of the US. Strawberry plants are shipped bare root and may be potted in a 3-4 inch pot and held for a few weeks if your garden is not ready. Prepare your beds by deeply digging in a layer of compost and about 5 pounds of bone meal for every 100 square feet. Plant 12 inches apart. Pinch off the runners to keep the original plants productive. For Woodland strawberries in particular, it is not necessary to pinch the runners if a groundcover effect is desired. Water regularly, using drip irrigation if possible. The first year that you plant a new patch of strawberries, pinch off the blossoms of everbearing varieties until July 1st. Pinch off the flowers of June bearing varieties the entire first year.
DISEASE AND INSECTS: Root weevils, aphids, and slugs are the main pests of strawberries. Consult your local county extension agent for the proper controls in your area. A good fall cleanup of pruning off old foliage and keeping weeds out will help eliminate disease problems. A change in location every 4 years, using new plants, is the best way to maintain a productive and healthy strawberry patch."






