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Sweet Red Strawberry Seeds 300pcs for Home Garden Planting

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$7.90

$ 3 .99 $3.99

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About this item

  • Strawberries are low-growing herbaceous plants with a fibrous root system and a crown from which arise basal leaves.
  • The leaves are compound, typically with three leaflets, sawtooth-edged, and usually hairy.
  • The flowers, generally white, rarely reddish, are borne in small clusters on slender stalks arising, like the surface-creeping stems, from the axils of the leaves.
  • The flesh consists of the greatly enlarged flower receptacle and is embedded with the many true fruits, or achenes, which are popularly called seeds.
  • The fruits are rich in vitamin C and are commonly eaten fresh as a dessert fruit, are used as a pastry or pie filling, and may be preserved in many ways.


PLANTING STRAWBERRY SEEDS:
In spring, sow seeds 1 inch apart and 1/8 inch deep in a container of fine seed starting mix.

Maintain at 60 – 70° and provide a strong light source. Keep evenly moist but not soggy.

Be patient, seeds can take 14 to 28 days to germinate. Feed young seedlings every 2 weeks with half-strength fertilizer.

When they have several sets of leaves, transplant 3 inches apart into a deeper container or individual pots so root systems have room to develop.

When 3 inches tall, gradually acclimate to outdoor conditions and plant 12 inches apart in fertile soil in full sun or partial shade in very hot climates.


TRANSPLANTING STRAWBERRY SEEDLINGS:
Once the young strawberry seedlings are 2-3” tall, and the last spring frosts have past, it’s time to think about planting them in the garden.

Strawberry seedlings are delicate, and they’re accustomed to the consistent light and temperatures in their indoor growing area. It’s important to harden off the seedlings by exposing them to the outdoors before planting.

Once the seedlings are hardened off, transplant them to a prepared garden bed with rich soil, spacing about 6 to 8 inches apart for alpine varieties and 8 to 12 inches apart for regular strawberries.


han_han
2025-08-29 12:34:45
I didn't know anything about planting strawberries but I wanted to try out hydroponics because it's fascinating to be able to grow things without soil.I bought one of these seed packets, and I planted 10 pods of 3-4 seeds each in my Ahopegarden hydroponic kit. Each pod eventually had at least one germinate, so I'd estimate a germination rate of 40%. I did not freeze/thaw the seeds before planting, I just plopped them in out of the package and kept them moist and they germinated in 5-7 days, with a couple stragglers that took 10-14. I'm about 7 weeks out from planting, and I'm getting some small flowers from my biggest plants now. I still have a bunch of unused seeds. So far I'm happy that so many grew!
JT
2025-08-17 21:25:10
would not sprout, dead seeds. I did many things to get these seeds to grow, but nope. many diffrent batches were seperated, some frozen some fridge, diffrent amounts of time ect nothing worked. waste of money. zero stars
Ernie Halsell
2025-08-01 11:49:02
Planted 2 weeks ago non have sprouted yet
Big john
2025-07-04 13:27:55
Good price, fast shipping. Thanks
Jase haze
2025-06-01 16:43:34
Arrived early and was as described
Jacob Baylis
2025-03-26 13:14:52
I've given up on these strawberry seeds. I've used more then half the package and waited the recommended time on the packaging for them to germinate. Not a single one germinated. Waste of money to buy these seeds, and of course because of all the time wasted trying to get them to germinate I'm unable to return them since it's past the return window.
Flordelis
2025-02-17 17:43:02
tried hard to grow these seeds: with stratification and without, outside and inside. nothing. Supposed to germinate in 2 weeks. In two months - nothing.
RoothB
2024-12-20 18:25:10
Impatiently awaiting our first strawberries.
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