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  • Is this a runner?

    Is this a strawberry runner? If it is what do I do with it?


    Thanks
    Last edited by teamladd; 23-06-2009, 06:23 PM.
    I hate slugs!!

  • #2
    Certainly looks like it.

    What you do depends what you want. If you want more plants then put the leafy bit in a pot of compost (still attached to the parent plant) and after about a month cut it off and replant in its final position. If you want more strawberry fruits then cut it off - you will get more for "babies" later
    A garden is a lovesome thing, God wot! (Thomas Edward Brown)

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    • #3
      Most certainly is!!!!!

      OK- so I presume this is your first year?????....cut them off- it'll be hard work for them to flower and fruit this year.

      Plenty plenty runners next yea...and the next.........I'd allow the mother plants to establish this year
      "Nicos, Queen of Gooooogle" and... GYO's own Miss Marple

      Location....Normandy France

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      • #4
        This is my first year however I was given this plants and they were from the year before. I also only have about 5 strawberries on the 5 plants I have. Should I pot on the runners then so I will have more plants for my allotment next year?
        I hate slugs!!

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        • #5
          I'd cut them off...and concentrate on the fruit this year ..and next...and start potting up a few runners next year- and loads the next.

          But that's my choice...others would get stuck in.....your call me thinks!!
          "Nicos, Queen of Gooooogle" and... GYO's own Miss Marple

          Location....Normandy France

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by teamladd View Post
            Is this a runner?
            sure looks like it's doing one
            aka
            Suzie

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            • #7
              Originally posted by piskieinboots View Post
              sure looks like it's doing one
              LOL

              Im not sure whether to cut them off or not! eek!
              I hate slugs!!

              Comment


              • #8
                Hate to raise your anxiety levels a further notch, ladd, but there is another factor to consider.
                When a plant starts to grow, the genetic clock which ticks away until it dies of old age does so by means of telomeres. What happens is that every time the cells divide, a cap called a telomere which lies at the end of each DNA filled chromosome, has a bit broken off it. Eventually, the telomeres disappear entirely and the process of cell division fails as the chromosomes fall apart. How long the telomeres are in an organism defines how old it may grow.
                The problem with your runners is that their telomeres are the same age as the parent plant, because in effect they are clones. Size is no indicator of age with strawberry runners.
                If your parent plant is also a runner that was given to you by a friend, as is common with strawberries, then part of its alloted lifespan is already used up, and quite apart from loss of vigour due to ongoing infection by viruses etc you have to be aware that it's probable five year span is already going to be halfway through next year, as will be its runners'. So don't go thinking that you have five years to play with your runners, even after you spend a year growing up your parent.
                Everyone thinks "Lovely !" when a friend gives them some strawberry runners, but there is a reason why commercial growers always use plants grown from seed, and seedsmen continue to sell plants and even strawberry seeds to gardeners. There's nowt for nowt in this life, particularly in the merciless world of biology.
                So I suppose you might as well pot up the runners this year, grow them and the parent on next year, and harvest from then on.
                There's no point reading history if you don't use the lessons it teaches.

                Head-hunted member of the Nutter's Club - can I get my cranium back please ?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Cor..never heard that before snohare!!!


                  well you learn something everyday!!
                  "Nicos, Queen of Gooooogle" and... GYO's own Miss Marple

                  Location....Normandy France

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by snohare View Post
                    Hate to raise your anxiety levels a further notch, ladd, but there is another factor to consider.
                    When a plant starts to grow, the genetic clock which ticks away until it dies of old age does so by means of telomeres. What happens is that every time the cells divide, a cap called a telomere which lies at the end of each DNA filled chromosome, has a bit broken off it. Eventually, the telomeres disappear entirely and the process of cell division fails as the chromosomes fall apart. How long the telomeres are in an organism defines how old it may grow.
                    The problem with your runners is that their telomeres are the same age as the parent plant, because in effect they are clones. Size is no indicator of age with strawberry runners.
                    If your parent plant is also a runner that was given to you by a friend, as is common with strawberries, then part of its alloted lifespan is already used up, and quite apart from loss of vigour due to ongoing infection by viruses etc you have to be aware that it's probable five year span is already going to be halfway through next year, as will be its runners'. So don't go thinking that you have five years to play with your runners, even after you spend a year growing up your parent.
                    Everyone thinks "Lovely !" when a friend gives them some strawberry runners, but there is a reason why commercial growers always use plants grown from seed, and seedsmen continue to sell plants and even strawberry seeds to gardeners. There's nowt for nowt in this life, particularly in the merciless world of biology.
                    So I suppose you might as well pot up the runners this year, grow them and the parent on next year, and harvest from then on.
                    Wow, thats a lot of info, but great. Thanks for writing it all out. I will do like you said, and will grow some plants from seed for next year too then!
                    I hate slugs!!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Nicos View Post
                      Cor..never heard that before snohare!!!
                      Neither had I. As Hazel always says, everyday is a schoolday
                      A garden is a lovesome thing, God wot! (Thomas Edward Brown)

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by snohare View Post
                        Hate to raise your anxiety levels a further notch, ladd, but there is another factor to consider.
                        When a plant starts to grow, the genetic clock which ticks away until it dies of old age does so by means of telomeres. What happens is that every time the cells divide, a cap called a telomere which lies at the end of each DNA filled chromosome, has a bit broken off it. Eventually, the telomeres disappear entirely and the process of cell division fails as the chromosomes fall apart. How long the telomeres are in an organism defines how old it may grow.
                        The problem with your runners is that their telomeres are the same age as the parent plant, because in effect they are clones. Size is no indicator of age with strawberry runners.
                        If your parent plant is also a runner that was given to you by a friend, as is common with strawberries, then part of its alloted lifespan is already used up, and quite apart from loss of vigour due to ongoing infection by viruses etc you have to be aware that it's probable five year span is already going to be halfway through next year, as will be its runners'. So don't go thinking that you have five years to play with your runners, even after you spend a year growing up your parent.
                        Everyone thinks "Lovely !" when a friend gives them some strawberry runners, but there is a reason why commercial growers always use plants grown from seed, and seedsmen continue to sell plants and even strawberry seeds to gardeners. There's nowt for nowt in this life, particularly in the merciless world of biology.
                        So I suppose you might as well pot up the runners this year, grow them and the parent on next year, and harvest from then on.
                        Does that mean its best to take runners from the 1st plant that has been given from a runner and not let it settle in?

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by snohare View Post
                          Everyone thinks "Lovely !" when a friend gives them some strawberry runners, but there is a reason why commercial growers always use plants grown from seed, and seedsmen continue to sell plants and even strawberry seeds to gardeners. There's nowt for nowt in this life, particularly in the merciless world of biology.
                          So I suppose you might as well pot up the runners this year, grow them and the parent on next year, and harvest from then on.
                          So why do strawberry specialists like Ken Muir and others describe the plants they sell as freshly grown, virus-free, open-ground runners, hm?

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                          • #14
                            I'm a bit confused about this too - most things I've read about growing strawberries say to replace the plants every 3 - 5 years, and then go on to talk about rooting runners to replace your plants with; nothing about growing from seed.

                            This would seem to suggest that replacing your plants with ones you've grown on from runners is a waste of time, and you should be replacing them with ones you've grown from seed.

                            Which is right? I'm new to strawberries (in my second year, and they're doing excellently at the moment - all from runners, btw)

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                            • #15
                              If you grow from seed, you will not have the same variety; just like children aren't identical to their parents (although usually share many features).

                              Older strawberry plants tend to run out of vigour (old age), the soil becomes depleted of nutrients (strawberries are nutrient-hungry) and they can be attacked by underground pests that build mup over time. They can also catch virus infections form aphid bites, which gradually weaken the plant as it acquires more viruses over it's lifetime.

                              Runners will be young plants growing in fresh soil that has no pests and plenty of nutrients. However, after many years, it is possible that all your strawberries may have become virus-infected, no matter how well you look after them. Aphid control is the best way to keep viruses at bay.
                              My strawberres are not troubled by aphids; the aphids much prefer rose bushes and apple trees (which I have plenty of!).

                              The idea is to keep moving your strawberries around and gradually destroy the older plants, or any that get sick. You keep the healthiest of the runners each year.
                              .

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