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Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Alpine Strawberry Arrivals

My second delivery of alpine strawberries arrived. This time it was a mixture of varieties from The Fragrant Garden.

They were a mixture of healthy and yellowing, some with fruit, and some without. None were named (of course), but were apparently yellow and red creeping and clumping types. And one 'cream' colour (that was just listed as yellow on the label, so who knows what it will be?).

A red alpine strawberry. WITH ACTUAL STRAWBERRIES.

Why yes, it is possible that I did eat the berries
 right after. Why do you ask?

It was very windy and rainy today (we had a strong easterly which is quite unusual - it blew my borage entirely the wrong way and the main stalk is now damaged. There's now an impressive patch of bare earth standing testimony to its mulching abilities). So I only planted out a couple of the strawberries, the rest are waiting in their pots.

 One went in with the Honey Babe peach, another went round the bag under the annoying shady tree that nothing much grows under, and a third joined the previous ones in the apple tree bed (the one with the fruit - one berry fell off as I planted it, so I ate it. And then I ate the other one. Despite the white on the berry they were definitely ripe and absolutely delicious).

Yellow Alpine in Colander
By far the happiest of the plants were the three yellow alpines I bought via TradeMe. They were big, happy, healthy plants and two have gone into the garden, with the third in a nice, big colander. This one also has a flower! 

The flower seems to be bigger than the remains on the smaller ones that arrived today. I'm not sure if this is due to the variety, the size of the plant, or the fact that it's difficult to compare them at different stages in the flower fruit cycle. I guess I'll be finding out!

One lovely strawberry flower...

So sometimes TradeMe gardeners are actually better than nurseries. They cost slightly more, but they were worth it.


But what do they taste like?

Fantastic. I'm trying to find non-cliche adjectives, but 'sweet', 'intense' and 'flavourful' keep springing back up into my descriptions like weeds.

They are like concentrated strawberries. The berry is gone in an instant, but the strength of the taste left behind seems like you just ate an entire larger strawberry. They're slightly sharp and sweet and perfect.

Delicious strawberries...
The yellow and white varieties are supposed to be mellower, or pineapple flavoured, but that may just be the colour affecting people's perceptions (nobody seems entirely certain on the difference). I look forward to blind taste tests. You know, FOR SCIENCE.

Yep. I am extremely pleased with my decision to go alpine-strawberry-mad. I am now going to start collecting them and seeing how many I can raise from seed. This will be difficult, as it involves not eating all the berries.

I don't want to divide them, as apparently the berries get bigger when the plants are bigger. Also, it's apparently easiest to grow them from seed if you just plant the entire berry (as there are multiple seeds, and obviously it's the best environment for them).


Buying the Strawberries

I have seen references in articles to being able to find them in the herb section of garden centres, but most of those articles are three or four years old. I certainly haven't seen any anywhere - though I don't exactly tour garden centres across the country. It's certainly something I'll be looking out for, though.

But so far, my options have been hunting down plants for sale online.

I've only found a couple of other sites that sell them (other than TradeMe), and they are small, difficult to contact businesses (one is a single person, the other has a defunct website and no response to my email). And Subtropica.co.nz, which has white strawberries, but only ships during summer. I wouldn't be surprised if these gardens mostly sell via TradeMe (or in person. But that doesn't help me much as they're often in Palmerston North or even further!).

They're also a lot more expensive than normal strawberries, around five times the price per plant. This is a pretty logical result of their rarity and the relative difficulty of propagating them (runners are much rarer and less vigorous. Seeds are an option, but slow. Most plants are created by dividing clumps after two or three years, which isn't particularly quick!).

Varieties are almost always described just as 'red', 'yellow' or 'white. There may be some confusion between the last two, as some of the product descriptions claim that the yellow variety turns white when ripe. It's possible that they are all "Yellow Wonder" and "White Pineapple" but I have found no authoritative source on that, or a way to tell them apart before you buy anything. They hybridise a lot once they're in the garden though, so they could be anything by now.

With luck, there will also be mention of whether it is clumping or runnering (although that's also dependent on the conditions - alpines can be induced to runner occasionally).




Sources:

Subtropica - Northland, white, ships in summer, $3 per plant

TradeMe.co.nz - variable range and prices. I've got some of my best and some of my worst plants here, but it's a good place to pick up really cheap plants, or unusual ones that are out of stock elsewhere. Or just to diversify your plant stock a bit.

The Fragrant Garden - Palmerston North, five unnamed varieties (yellow/red/creeping/non-runnering), $5.20

Koanga Heritage Gardens - Hawke's Bay, White Pineapple (an actual named variety!, runnering) and unnamed red (nonrunnering). Order by August to be shipped in spring. $12 (unclear whether seeds or plants, and how many of each). Update: I received my strawberries in the first week of September; three small, healthy plants of each type, so $4 each.

Nikau Hill - Palmerston North, problems with website and no response to email when I tried to order, but had yellow and red for $9.90 Update: New website online in Sept, '14

Heavenly Herbs - Wellington, private grower. Red. Contact by email for availability and payment, $5
Haven't tried.

More about alpine strawberries:
Strawberry Store: Alpine Strawberries (US based. Good for information, but can't be shipped into NZ)

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