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Dawn5d ago
@Dan Wedge I wanted to let you know that my second year's batch of alpine strawberries are coming in strong. I have 10 little seedlings that sprouted in less than a week. It hasn't warmed up enough to uncover last year's batch but it's been a relatively mild winter here, so I feel confident they'll revive. With 2 years to establish, they will definitely have a better chance of surviving a true northern winter.
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Replies (8)

Dan Wedge5d ago
This is wonderful news! They are meant for alpine climates so I anticipate that you will have many great years ahead.
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Dawn5d ago
I hope so! All the reading I did has me wondering. I live in a record breaker of a zone so I'm always skeptical. 😅
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Troy5d ago
What climate are alpine strawberrys meant for?
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Dan Wedge5d ago
3-10 climate zones. I know them from them growing in rockies when hiking in july. They grow for me here in zone 7 fairly well 3 year successions going into 4
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Dan Wedge5d ago
https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/edible/fruits/strawberry…
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Troy5d ago
Ah, the might be what we refer to as "wild strawberries". We see them on hikes quite frequently.
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Dan Wedge5d ago
Exactly, i have a yellow variant that is white when ready so the birds don’t touch them
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beejay5d ago
Cool. I'm in zone 4a (145 day typical growing season) here in MN, but people here do really well with strawberries, it's just limited to about 2 short months. Crowns buried well in advance will get June-bearing. Starting runners can be shorter waits, though. Never knew about Alpine ones.
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