Berries

Fragaria × ananassa (White Str)

Fragaria x ananassa (White Strawberry)

Also known as White Garden Strawberry

$12.95
SunFull sun to part shade
💧WaterModerate
🌡Zones4-8

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About This Plant

this selection is a June-bearing strawberry in the Fragaria × ananassa group, the modern garden hybrid that arose from a chance cross of the North American Fragaria virginiana and the Chilean Fragaria chiloensis. It produces classic red, juicy fruit on low compact plants, perfect for raised beds, garden rows, and even large containers.

Strawberries in the Pacific Northwest do best in full sun on well-drained soil with steady summer moisture and a slight acidic preference (pH 5.6 to 6.5). Set crowns at soil level with roots fully buried, mulch with straw to keep berries clean, and plan to renovate or replace the bed every three years to keep yields strong and disease pressure low. June-bearers fruit in a single flush; day-neutrals and everbearers spread harvest across the summer.

Strawberries are self-fertile, so a single plant will set fruit, but expect heavier crops with several plants and good pollinator activity. The two main local pressures are Spotted Wing Drosophila (a fruit-fly that lays eggs in ripening berries) and slugs, plus birds raiding the patch as fruit colors up. Floating row covers, fine-mesh netting, and prompt harvest are the standard PNW responses. Strawberries are not strongly deer-resistant and benefit from fenced beds in deer country.

If you're considering native fruiting alternatives that support PNW birds and ecology, look at Vaccinium ovatum (Evergreen Huckleberry), Vaccinium parvifolium (Red Huckleberry), Rubus parviflorus (Thimbleberry), Rubus spectabilis (Salmonberry), or Amelanchier alnifolia (Saskatoon). These provide bird food, pollinator support, and Indigenous food heritage in your landscape.

Plant Details

Botanical
Fragaria x ananassa (White Strawberry)
Common name
White Garden Strawberry
Lifecycle
Perennial
Foliage type
Semi-evergreen
Mature size
6-10 in tall × 10-14 in wide
Growth rate
Fast
Bloom time
Mid-spring
Bloom color
White
Foliage color
Green

Care Notes

Plant in well-drained, humus-rich, slightly acidic soil. Pinch off flowers in the first season to redirect energy into root establishment. Watch for Spotted Wing Drosophila on ripening fruit and slugs on foliage and fruit. Protect ripening berries from birds. Replace beds every 3 years to reduce virus buildup.

Garden Attributes

  • Pacific NW native
  • Deer resistant
  • Coastal suitable
  • Grown organically
  • Pollinator value: Bees, Native specialist bees
  • Wildlife: Bird forage, Small mammal forage, Pollinator support
Row of potted bareroot conifer trees at Dragonfly Farm

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