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Plant strawberries indoors in any season to keep them away from the cold and to give yourself a year-round supply of fresh, tasty fruit. Here is the easy process to follow.
Steps
Part 1
Part 1 of 3:
Obtaining Strawberry Seeds
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1Choose a fresh strawberry (or two). Make sure it is not too squishy and are ripe.
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2Push the toothpick end gently underneath one of the seeds on the skin of the strawberry. Quickly flick your wrist to get the seed out. You need to use a flicking motion because strawberry seeds move fast, and if you try to push it out, you'll just dig a hole in your strawberry.Advertisement
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3Keep flicking seeds off and putting them on your plate. Collect as many as you think you'll need but a good amount is around 20-30 seeds, to ensure that at least one takes.
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Part 2
Part 2 of 3:
Planting the Strawberry Seeds
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1Fill a cup, jar or other container with soil suitable for growing strawberries.
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2Dip the toothpick in water. It should be damp, not dripping wet. Take the tip of the toothpick and poke a couple of your seeds, they should stick onto the toothpick without falling off.
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3Once about five to seven seeds have stuck to the toothpick, hold the toothpick over the soil-filled cup. Flick the top of the toothpick (not the seeds) with your middle or forefinger. The strawberry seeds should fall off and scatter into the cup.
- Do not push the seeds down.
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4Repeat several times until all of the seeds are in the soil-filled cup (or container).[1]
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Part 3
Part 3 of 3:
Helping the Seeds to Grow
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1Fill a cup of water a third of the way. Add two thirds hydrogen peroxide.
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2Stir the mixture. Dip the toothpick in this solution. Then drip some of the solution over the seeds. This will help them grow, as hydrogen peroxide is a natural oxidizer.
- Note: You do not need to do this every day––every other day is fine until the seeds have sprouted, then once a week is all you need.
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3Water the soil gently. Don't overdo the watering or the seeds will drown and can turn moldy. Keep the soil moist but not wet, watering about once or twice a week.[2]
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4Place the jar in a warm place where there is enough sunlight for the seeds to sprout.
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5Wait until the seeds sprout. In a few days, the seeds should have sprouted. If enough plants take, you can transplant them after a few weeks, into separate pots.
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6Keep tending to the strawberries. When the plants grow large enough, fruit will form and the plant should be sprouting some yummy strawberries for you to eat.[3]
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Community Q&A
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QuestionHow many times a day do I water the flowers?Community AnswerIt depends on temperature, sunlight, and wind (if outdoors). If you are growing them in a pot: Before you plant, mix the soil with water so that it is moist all the way through. Fill the pot with the mixture, then feel how heavy it is. Use the weight as your estimator. If you lift the pot, and it feels light, water it.
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QuestionHow long will it take until my plants start bearing fruit?Community AnswerPlants usually start bearing fruit in about 14 weeks after they have sprouted, however they may not produce in their first year.
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QuestionHow do I know when to pick the strawberries?Community AnswerPick them when they are all red and don't have any green spots left, but don't wait until they get dark red.
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Warnings
- Do not plant strawberries using soils that tomatoes, potatoes, peppers or eggplant have been grown in recently; these areas may be infected with verticillium rot.[5]⧼thumbs_response⧽
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Things You'll Need
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1 medium or large sized strawberry
- 1 toothpick
- Hydrogen peroxide
- 2 cups (one filled with water, one filled with soil for your strawberries to live in!)
- 1 paper plate
References
- ↑ https://youtu.be/8lBn81E5VME?t=110
- ↑ https://gardenerspath.com/plants/fruit/grow-strawberries/#Planting-Strawberries
- ↑ https://www.almanac.com/plant/strawberries
- ↑ https://web.extension.illinois.edu/strawberries/growing.cfm
- ↑ https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/plpath-fru-32
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bw6tmHeI79k
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8KncCXqhKKg
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