This year having decided to turn my little 'potager' into raised beds, it meant lifting the strawberries and putting them into 6" pots whilst the garden was overhauled. By the time I came to re-plant them, they had begun to flower so I thought it best to leave them undisturbed. I picked my first one yesterday! Because they aren't on the ground they are clean and as they are just outside the door along a wall, the birds haven't found them either! Maybe I should stick to growing them in pots next year!
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First Strawberries
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Originally posted by Madasafish View PostA few flowers. ours come into fruit for Wimbledon - and then the mice come...
Anyone got a cure for field mice? Anything that is not involving a minefield :-)
Edit: Make sure it's a cat who can eat a whole mouse. Mine tends to leave bits behind on the patio which the chickens rush over to scoff before I notice and get a chance to clean it up.Last edited by Crundy; 15-05-2009, 03:01 PM.
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I noticed a fair number of flowers on my strawberry tower earlier in the week and now have about a dozen green strawberries. As we have a gang of pigeons that hang around nearby I thought it would be sensible to put up some netting and this is what I came up with.Attached FilesThere are 10 kinds of people in the world, those that understand binary and those that don't.
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Hi ckfe. It used to be the done thing to remove the flowers off strawberry plants in the first year, so they use their energy to build up good strong plants for the next year. Seems like a terrible waste to me!!! I've never done it and my plants have performed well. I feed them with tomato food as soon as they start to flower, until I've picked the last berry. CheersI'd give up chocolate but I'm no quitter!
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Hve had quite a few punnets from the strawbs in the hanging baskets in the tunnel - today the first two outdoor strawberries were picked and swiftly dispatched !!Rat
British by birth
Scottish by the Grace of God
http://scotsburngarden.blogspot.com/
http://davethegardener.blogspot.com/
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Being a bit further south and a lot warmer most of the time, we're much further on than you guys in the UK. Our alpine strawberry patch is rather large to be honest and they grow like weeds in various parts of the garden but J spends about half an hour each evening (usually with my help) picking the alpines, we really have so many we have to give them awayTonyF, Dordogne 24220
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