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How to Propagate Strawberries

7/29/2012

15 Comments

 
Few garden plants are as easy to propagate as strawberries. And you can multiply them for free. If you have strawberry plants and want more there are three basic methods to do it, but one stands out as ideal for home gardeners.
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Strawberries are easy to grow and propagate
The first method of propagating strawberries is by division. Many strawberry plants will develop additional crowns at the base of the plant. These crowns can be separated into new plants. When done carefully and properly, a mature strawberry plant can be grown from each of these lateral crowns, but often the mother plant is compromised and dies in the process. Division requires expertise and precision, yet only produces a few new plants for each mother plant.
 
The second method is to grow strawberries from seed. Each strawberry fruit is covered with seeds and those seeds have the potential to become new plants. Like with most viable garden seeds, proper soil, proper water, and proper light will produce a plant. This is a great way to grow many plants if you have the necessary germinating and growing space and equipment. The biggest concern is that most strawberries in gardens today are hybrids and that means the seeds from those plants will not grow true to the parent; new plants from seed may be dramatically different than the plant you're trying to copy. While propagating from seed with heirloom strawberries is an option, it's not the best one.

The easiest, most familiar, and best propagation method for home gardeners is to grow new plants from runners. Horizontal stems appear from the base of mature strawberry plants and new plants will grow from the nodes at the tips of these runners, or stolons. Roots grow from the nodes when they rest on soil.
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A strawberry runner
A single parent plant can provide many offspring in just a few years and each new plant is genetically identical to the original plant. Many gardeners call them daughter plants (see my blog "Should I Call You Mother, Daughter, or Sister?" link below).
 
When left alone, runners will develop into plants at varying distances from the main strawberry plant depending on the length of the runner and where it contacts soil. Gardeners have great control in this natural process by directing the runners or by potting them. I do both.
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If I have a bare spot where I want a new strawberry plant and a runner is headed in that direction, I'll spend a few days keeping it above the soil, on mulch, and when it gets to a spot I'm happy with I'll let the tip rest. To ensure it stays where I want it, I'll use a small metal garden staple to hold it in place.

This is a very easy way to expand a strawberry bed, but it has limits because the runners will only extend a limited distance from the mother plant. To fill in spaces far from the mother or to create a completely new strawberry bed, I recommend potting up the runners.

The runners are flexible and easy to direct into a small pot filled with quality garden or potting soil. I reuse small plastic pots from nurseries. I've used yogurt containers with great success; just punch a few holes in the bottom of yogurt cups for drainage.
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Fill the pot with soil, place the runner on top, and hold it in place. I make small staples from stiff wire to do this because they stay in place very well; I find that many commercial garden staples are too long for small pots and it's cheaper to make your own. You can also use a small stone, sticks, or anything else that will hold the runner in contact with the soil.

Do not cut the runner. Leave it connected to the mother plant. Water the small plant regularly, along with the rest of the strawberry bed. After a few weeks, roots will fill the pot and the new plant is ready to transplant. At this point, trace the runner to the base of the mother and cut it. You can trim the runner from the young plant too or just leave it to dry and break off later.
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Remove the plant and soil from the pot and transplant as you would any other garden plant. Have your hole ready, place it gently, and backfill it with soil.

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When planting a mature strawberry plant it's very important that the crown stay above soil level. Burying the crown can lead to rotting that will kill the plant. Transplanting these new plants is a little more forgiving because they're still developing the crown. Just place the soil level of the pot at the same level as the soil in the bed and you should be good.

Many strawberry varieties will send out multiple runners from a parent plant. Some will only send out a few. You can grow plants from every runner, but the mother plant is spending a lot of energy to get the little plants growing so helping to direct that energy to just a few plants is better for the new plants and the mother. After you've selected which runners will become plants, prune off the others.

Along the same line, individual runners will continue to grow even when the first node has begun to grow roots and sprout a young plant. It's normal for a single runner to produce three or four plants. For the best and strongest growth it's a good idea to prune off the tip of the runner once you have an initial node growing in a pot.
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That being said, I will often pot up multiple plants from a single runner if it is healthy, sturdy, and obviously growing well. The new plants at the different nodes will grow at different rates so be sure both the initial plant and the last one in line are growing well before you separate them from the mother and transplant them.

With propagation, a few strawberry plants can quickly fill in a small garden bed in a single season. By controlling how and where the mother plants send their runners you can ensure each plant has the best chance for survival and production.
15 Comments
richard
9/15/2013 10:53:03 pm

when can I plant out strawberry runners that are growing in pots? now or in the spring

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Gardener Scott link
9/16/2013 04:19:05 am

Richard, typically you'll want to plant the young plants in late summer or in early fall and then mulch them in winter. There is still enough time for roots to develop before the ground freezes. They tend to survive cold winters better in the ground than in pots. If you can put potted runners in a sheltered location over winter and keep them from drying out, they should survive and you can put them in a new bed or in bare spots in your strawberry bed in spring. This spring I dug up the small plants that I allowed to grow outside where the runners rested on the soil last year; they made it through the winter, then I potted them up until the grew larger, and moved them to a new bed.

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Richard
9/16/2013 04:57:27 am

Many thanks for the very useful and detailed advice!!!

Kimi
1/4/2014 12:16:38 am

Does the life of the runner tend to last same as its mother source? also if so it is a hybrid which I may not reproduce its variety trough seeds how can I prevent losing this plant species?

Reply
Gardener Scott link
1/4/2014 03:45:47 am

Kimi, the runner essentially extends the life of the mother by continuing as a cloned plant. While strawberries can live for years, after about three years they become woody and less productive. Each daughter plant from a runner is identical to the mother so when the mother plant eventually dies its genetic line continues through the runners. That is how you prevent losing the species. The daughters will be the same general size, the fruit will be the same, the color will be the same, and the maturity until death will be the same. Runners are not hybrids.

If you propagate strawberries through seeds each generation will be slightly different than the one before and you can run into problems with hybrid development if different strawberry varieties pollinate each other.

If you want to maintain a variety, propagate through the use of runners.

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Jane
6/3/2014 07:35:00 pm

I have strawberries in hanging baskets that are sending runners out can l take cuttings indoors to over winter?

Many thanks
Jane

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Gardener Scott link
6/8/2014 01:21:36 am

Jane, you'll need to allow the runners to root and grow into new plants before overwintering. Cuttings won't survive. You can pot up the young plants into new pots or hanging baskets. The plants are pretty durable and can survive winter in the ground in most locations, but in pots they need to be brought into a protected location so that they don't freeze to death because pots don't offer the insulation that the ground does. Strawberries also need a dormancy period so place the pots in an unheated garage and allow them to go dormant when temperatures drop. You'll also need to water occasionally so that the soil doesn't dry out completely; too much water can lead to rot.

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Janine
1/31/2015 07:55:20 pm

Thank you Scott for your easy to read directions on how to propagate more strawberry plants from runners. Can advise if there is anything you must feed the plants with to boost the strawberry fruit produce?

Reply
Gardener Scott link
4/12/2015 01:24:04 am

Janine, strawberries can benefit from a balanced fertilizer a few weeks after placing in the ground. Each year they should be fertilized again in mid to late summer. I like to use fish emulsion early in the season. Compost tea or comfrey tea can benefit them later in the season.

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Kevin
4/11/2015 11:02:16 pm

Thank you for your information
Could you please tell me if there is any disadvantage propagating by using single roots? A method seen on YouTube saving strawberry roots: https://youtu.be/HRhWygxc1Tc

Reply
Gardener Scott link
4/12/2015 01:48:44 am

Kevin, that's a great question and an interesting video. Strawberries grow from a crown, not single roots. This video implies that you can just plant a root and a plant will grow, but like many other plant types a single root is not enough. If you break a strawberry plant apart and allow the crown to remain attached to root sections, those with the crown should grow into plants. I do not think that is an efficient method of propagation. It will take longer for those little pieces of crown to grow to a size where they can support a full-size plant and produce fruit. It will be more efficient to plant the intact crown and roots, wait for the runners, and propagate with runners. As with growing from seed, I suspect that this single root method is more difficult and would produce little fruit until the second year. As you may have seen in your search for information, no one else propagates strawberries using single roots. The time-proven methods involve bare roots with a fully intact crown or runners.

Reply
Daniel
4/13/2015 09:25:57 am

Thank you for your great guide but i have some question and hope you can answer them?
I live in tropics: Dominican republic, some cities has strawberry plant with great success but I tried and everything failed. I am trying to get the plant from seeds because the nursery that has strawberry plants for sale is very far from where I live. I have done the follow:
1- plant the seeds directly into soil, covering it a bit. but they dont germinated.
2- i freeze the seeds for one week and them plant it again in soil but this time i planted it an inch deep. they dont germinated.
3- I used wet paper towel technique but without freezing the seeds. still i dont get event one sprout.
and last: I planted seeds in soild without freezing, covered it with a bit of soil and added am light bulb but again without any success.
In every try i added water to prevent them from dryout.
what is the perfect way to get strawberry plants? I really want to have them, thanks and God bless.

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