Alpine Strawberry

$10.00
Available Spring 2025

4 or more plant divisions for planting

Fragaria vesca

The Alpine Strawberry is an herbaceous perennial plant that provides berries for snacking and lush green ground cover for our food forest. The fruits are nowhere near the size of garden strawberries but make up for it in flavor and juiciness. Our Alpine Strawberries are seedlings from cultivar parents—‘Ruegen’ and ‘Alexandria’—which have been selected for larger fruit size.

Alpine Strawberry has a very long harvest window, especially compared to garden strawberry which is mostly harvested during the month of June. It blooms over a much longer period of time and the fruit can stay on the plant for a much longer time without rotting. We’ve been harvesting since early June and now it’s September and we see no signs of letting up. Strawberries are easy to propagate via runners and divisions. They will naturalize and compete with other groundcovers that you may not want.

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4 or more plant divisions for planting

Fragaria vesca

The Alpine Strawberry is an herbaceous perennial plant that provides berries for snacking and lush green ground cover for our food forest. The fruits are nowhere near the size of garden strawberries but make up for it in flavor and juiciness. Our Alpine Strawberries are seedlings from cultivar parents—‘Ruegen’ and ‘Alexandria’—which have been selected for larger fruit size.

Alpine Strawberry has a very long harvest window, especially compared to garden strawberry which is mostly harvested during the month of June. It blooms over a much longer period of time and the fruit can stay on the plant for a much longer time without rotting. We’ve been harvesting since early June and now it’s September and we see no signs of letting up. Strawberries are easy to propagate via runners and divisions. They will naturalize and compete with other groundcovers that you may not want.

4 or more plant divisions for planting

Fragaria vesca

The Alpine Strawberry is an herbaceous perennial plant that provides berries for snacking and lush green ground cover for our food forest. The fruits are nowhere near the size of garden strawberries but make up for it in flavor and juiciness. Our Alpine Strawberries are seedlings from cultivar parents—‘Ruegen’ and ‘Alexandria’—which have been selected for larger fruit size.

Alpine Strawberry has a very long harvest window, especially compared to garden strawberry which is mostly harvested during the month of June. It blooms over a much longer period of time and the fruit can stay on the plant for a much longer time without rotting. We’ve been harvesting since early June and now it’s September and we see no signs of letting up. Strawberries are easy to propagate via runners and divisions. They will naturalize and compete with other groundcovers that you may not want.