The strawberry starters we purchased from Dehn's Nursery at the Minneapolis Farmers Maket were June Bearing, Everbearing, and Alpine. The June Bearing and Everbearing names are a bit mis-leading because both tend to flower in mid-May and stop producing in early July.
![]() |
| Late March 2012 |
| Early April 2012 |
| Mid May 2012 |
These plants practically grow themselves. They are so densely packed now that the soil rarely sees any sun, which keeps the weeds down. After the most of the leaves die off after the first frost we usually just crush them up with our hands and use them to mulch the bed before it gets too cold. They are not fussy about water or about heat. It just doesn't get any easier!
Since they like to spread like crazy, we have no idea which berries are June bearing, and which ones are Everbearing. The Alpines are easy to spot. They have smaller leaves and produce a much tinier fruit than what you see in the market.
![]() |
| Alpine |
![]() |
| June/Everbearing, no idea which is which! |
After we pruned ALL the plants the fall of 2010 (little fruit production), we decided to not prune at all in the fall of 2011.
![]() |
| Raspberries: Late March 2012 |
![]() |
| Raspberries: Late April 2012 |
As you can see, the plants are taking over. The harvest was delicious and plentiful! We were taking in a sheet pan (below) per day for about 3 weeks and eventually ran out of space in the freezer. At that point we just had people over to come and eat (or take home) whatever they could pick.
1.) Pick and Wash (big yogurt containers work great for collecting and washing)
2.) Air dry on tray (with paper towels) in refrigerator for 8 hours or so
3.) Remove paper towels and freeze on tray for 4 hours or so (best results if the berries don't touch)
4.) ??????????
5.) Profit!
Look forward to Garden Berries, Part II: Le Preservening











