Frigo strawberries: from planting to storage

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What are frigo strawberries? When and how should frigo plants be used? We give tips on planting, caring for, harvesting and storing the frozen strawberry plants.

Strawberry cuttings
Frigo strawberries are useful for harvesting strawberries late in the year [Photo: Edita Paulauskiene/ Shutterstock.com]

To big, tasty strawberries The Frigo strawberry was developed for professional cultivation so that it can be planned and harvested over the entire growth period. Contrary to what the name sounds, the Frigo plants are not their own species or variety. They're just specially treated regular strawberries. Here you can find out where Frigo strawberries come from, how to grow the Frigos and even how to make them yourself.

contents

  • What are frigo strawberries?
  • Plant frigo strawberries
    • When to plant frigo strawberries?
    • The right location for frigoplanting of strawberries
    • Planting instructions for Frigo strawberries
  • Caring for Frigo strawberry plants: you should pay attention to this
  • Harvest Frigo Strawberries
  • Storing Frigo strawberry plants

What are frigo strawberries?

Frigo strawberries are strawberry cuttings that are removed from mother plants in winter and then stored refrigerated at -1°C for up to ten months.
With frigo plants it is possible to grow strawberries very late in the year, almost independently of their natural harvest time. The idea of ​​the Frigo strawberry comes from professional cultivation, since it offers a price advantage to be able to offer strawberries later in the year. Because German growers use Frigo strawberries, supermarkets do not have to resort to imported goods in late summer and autumn.

Strawberry plant and cuttings in a pot
Cuttings like this can be frozen as frigo strawberries in winter [Photo: Jean Faucett/ Shutterstock.com]

But how does this work? In winter, strawberry plants receive a cold stimulus that encourages them to flower next year - this is called flowering induction. Naturally, the plant would sprout in the following spring, flower after four to six weeks and bear fruit after eight weeks. The harvest for the year would have been mostly complete after exhausting all the different varieties in July. The exception are the rather smaller strawberries, which are the remounting ones strawberry varieties discard later in the year. Often it is hardly worth harvesting them.

Things are different with the frigo plants. These plants were taken out of the ground in winter, sorted and stored. While there are already a number of plants in the field in spring and summer, they are led to believe that it is still winter. The flowering plants lie dark and cool in the foil bag and hibernate. About five weeks before the naturally grown strawberries give their final crop, they are thawed and planted. Now the strawberry plants continue to develop normally: because the plants think it is spring, it takes about four weeks to flower and eight weeks to the first harvest. So if you thaw and plant Frigo strawberries in batches between early May and early July, you can harvest large, high-quality strawberries by mid-October.

Tip: There are differences between different quality levels of frigo plants. Normal Frigos are small seedlings that are removed from the cut plants at the end of the season. Then there are so-called waiting bed plants. They were separated from their mother plants much earlier, cultivated in the waiting bed with plenty of space and fertilizer and are correspondingly larger. Waiting bed plants are also uprooted in winter and sold as larger, more expensive frigo plants the following year. They deliver higher yields than normal Frigo plants.

Frigo strawberry plant
Regular frigo strawberries are smaller than the larger waiting bed plants [Photo: SEEphotos7171/ Shutterstock.com]

Plant frigo strawberries

Frigo plants are sold as leafless, bare-rooted plants. They consist only of roots and the so-called crown, i.e. the bud close to the ground for the new shoot. You can only order them online, because frigo plants are only thawed just before shipping. Below we describe how you can store Frigo strawberries, i.e. how you can make them yourself.

Tip: Because the Frigo strawberries only bear fruit by freezing later in the year, they will be ready for harvest the following year on their varietal date. In the following year, new frigo plants would have to be ordered or produced for a strawberry harvest in late summer and autumn.

When to plant frigo strawberries?

In principle, you can plant Frigo strawberries all year round to harvest the same variety all year round. However, because the frigos are more expensive than normal strawberry plants, they are usually only planted from the beginning of May to the beginning of July. The time at the beginning of the year can be filled with the early to late strawberry varieties.

Strawberry seedling
The correct planting height is very important when planting strawberries [Photo: goja1/ Shutterstock.com]

The right location for frigoplanting of strawberries

Like other strawberries, Frigo strawberries love a sunny spot without much wind. The location should not be exposed to severe frosts in winter. As an alternative to a frost-protected location, the plants can also be covered with leaves in autumn.
A perfect strawberry soil is humus and loose. Sandy or clayey soils should be improved with compost or potting soil before planting. Above all, waterlogged soils - i.e. heavy clay and loam soils - cause difficulties for strawberries. It can be worthwhile to create ridges on such soils in which the strawberries grow southwards.

Planting instructions for Frigo strawberries

Because Frigo strawberries are delivered bare-root, planting is a little more difficult than with normal plants in pots. It is important to pay attention to the correct position of the roots and the correct height.

  • Plan a distance of 25 to 30 cm for the strawberries.
  • Each plant needs a planting hole that is at least as deep as the roots of the plant are long.
  • If the soil is poor, some potting soil can be added to the hole. A soil with reduced nitrogen and increased phosphate content such as ours is recommended Plantura organic tomato and vegetable soil. It promotes the flowering and fruiting of strawberries.
  • Cut off the root tips of the strawberry to encourage branching.
  • Plant the strawberry so that the roots are hanging straight down and the "crown", i.e. the green bud of the plant, is just above the ground. Then the hole is filled with soil.
  • Spread a mostly organic fertilizer like ours between the plants Plantura organic tomato fertilizer and incorporate it lightly. Between the strawberries should be mulched with straw or other dry material. This ensures that the soil retains moisture better and you can harvest clean strawberries.
  • Finally, the freshly planted strawberries are watered vigorously.

Caring for Frigo strawberry plants: you should pay attention to this

Frigo strawberry plants are and will always be normal strawberries - the trick described above just messed up their inner clock a bit. For further care, you should consider that the bare-root Frigo strawberries initially need a lot of water in order not to thirst and also to be able to absorb nutrients well.
It also makes sense to apply an organic liquid fertilizer again five weeks after planting – like ours Plantura Organic Tomato & Vegetable Fertilizer – to fertilize. This ensures that your strawberry plants are well supplied with potassium and phosphorus to produce large and healthy fruit. Everything else about care of strawberries Find out in our overview article.

Harvest Frigo Strawberries

The Frigos are harvested about 8 to 10 weeks after planting. So if you plant new Frigo strawberry plants every two weeks in spring and summer, you can harvest continuously later.
It is important to really remove all ripe fruits, even if some of them may have been eaten by insects or snails or have become moldy. Because bad strawberries in the field very quickly infect other strawberries. In this way you can save the harvest, especially if there are also weather conditions that favor fungal pathogens. You can find out everything else you need to know about this in our relevant article on the subject Harvesting and storing strawberries.

Strawberry roots are cut
Before planting, the roots of the Frigo strawberries are trimmed [Photo: Edita Paulauskiene/ Shutterstock.com]

Storing Frigo strawberry plants

Can or must Frigo strawberry plants be stored? The answer to this question is a clear no. Because Frigos are "just" normal strawberries that get through the winter just like other strawberries. The leaves are cut down and removed after harvest to prevent the spread of fungal diseases. It can then be harvested again the following year. However, all strawberries on all plants will then of course be ripe at the same time, so you should be prepared to boil down and preserve the strawberries. We have everything for you again Overwintering and cutting strawberries summarized.

Tip: You can also try making frigo strawberries yourself. To do this, plants are removed from the bed in November or December, all leaves are removed except for the bud in the center and the plant is roughly cleaned. It is then important to dry the plants as well as possible. Then freeze as many plants in a freezer bag as you plan to plant out as a set in the coming year. If you store your Frigo strawberries, do not do so below -1 °C in the freezer, so as not to damage the plants.

Strawberries should not be missing in any snack garden! But other berry and fruit trees as well as vegetables can easily be grown for direct consumption in the garden. You can find out more about this in our special article on Creation of a snack garden for big and small.

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