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Indian Strawberry
Anyone has got this plant at the moment? Mine died many years back and I
have been looking for a replacement since. Jeremy |
#2
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Indian Strawberry
JLee wrote:
Anyone has got this plant at the moment? Mine died many years back and I have been looking for a replacement since. Jeremy, I presume you mean Duchesnia indica aka D. fresnii/Fragaria indica. Its a diminutive strawberry relative with pleasant, short-lived, bright yellow flowers followed by small, glistening red strawberries that look enticing, but have no flavour. It is primarily an ornamental plant, sometimes used in hanging baskets or as ground cover in milder regions of the country. It is almost a weed down here and constantly attempts to invade my garden from the lane outside. I planted a single piece of Duchesnia back in the early 1990's and had to get rid of it after a couple of years, since it becomes too invasive in the very rich soil I maintain for gingers and bananas.. It seeded itself about and spread to outside the garden, from where it constantly attempts to re-invade. Gardens that suffer regular frosts would have no such problem. You are welcome to some pieces if you send an A5 sized SAE - mail me on for details of my address. David Poole TORQUAY UK |
#3
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Indian Strawberry
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#4
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Indian Strawberry
Rodger Whitlock wrote:
I beg to differ. Fragaria indica is actually fairly hardy..... That may be your exper5ience in the P.N.W. but in the UK it is moderately hardy depending upon location. In the south it is vigorous, but no more so than better known ground-cover plants such as Vinca, Lamium, Hypericum calycinum etc. A series of very mild winters can enable it to cover large areas by means of runners and seedlings, but inland and further north its vigour is curtailed by frequent, medium frosts to minus 7C. We tried to get it established in light, dryish shade, on top of a rather high retaining wall up in the Midlands. The idea being for it to cascade down, forming a curtain of foliage, flower and fruit, as it will do here in the south. Regular frosts to minus 8C during an 'average' winter killed all but the most well established and rooted offsets. Original plants were not killed outright, but failed to make really effective cover. David Poole TORQUAY UK |
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