== You can take a cutting at the base of the plant and try to root it. I , personally, have had not much success with that. In the times where I did get the plants to survive, and they were pretty and healthy, but they never bore any fruit. I consider myself a pretty good or fair to middlin" horticulturist. But, this one has alluded me. Strawberries are one of my favorite fruits, actually they are a ripened ovary and the achenes (the little seeds are the fruit..) but except for blueberries, are my love. The best way that I have found is to divide the plants as crowns. They naturally do this, and just separating them produces more plants. If anyone has anything to add to this please do so. I do know that the modern variety of strawberry was a cross between a European strin and a mountain strain (like one from Colorado) because the European strain was being attacked by a fungi. Oh, Scottie, please beam me up...
I let my strawberries send out "sisters" They are secondary plants to the mother plant. Let them grow roots and then cut the main stem feeding them. When they get new growth on them, they are able to be transplanted. I planted 80 strawberry plants and in one season, they produced over 1150 sisters. I kept 150 and gave away the remaining 1100 plants.
Strawberries grow on bushes, not trees.
Yes
Well, strawberries grow mostly on trees.
strawberries are easy enough to grow. you just have to water them everyday and keep them in the sunlight
No.
Yes, strawberries can grow in partial shade, but they typically produce more fruit in full sun.
Strawberries prefer to grow in direct sunlight rather than in shade.
strawberries
Yes
yes
Raspberries grow on a shrub that tops out at about 36" high in loamy well drained soil. Raspberries grow on arching canes on the plant.
Strawberries are cultivated worldwide, but Russia, Spain, Turkey and the US grow the most.