Wednesday, August 10, 2022

Re: [nafex] strawberry info

Hi, Lee.

Raintree Nursery lists some of these. However, they list Capron as a
female! That might explain why you had so little fruit.

Regards,

Jay

Jay Cutts
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On 8/5/2022 12:56 PM, Lee Reich wrote:
> Hi Henry,
>
> I first learned about musk strawberries decades ago and then, while working at the Fruit Lab of the USDA, wanted to try them. They were unavailable in this country then, but I was able to import them and waited for their 2 year quarantine. I know that other people have gotten fruit from them but I never got more than very few, very small fruits. The variety I had (and still have a few of, from years of runnering, which it does prolifically) is Profumata di Tortona, which was was grown commercially in Italy. I did have a male pollinator also, called Capron.
>
> I consider this strawberry to be one of the best tasting, sort of like strawberry and raspberry. But I don't know why it's yield and size were so poor.
>
> By the way, I devoted a chapter to musk and alpine strawberries (the latter of which I do grow, the white variety, which is delectable) in my now out of print book Uncommon Fruit for Every Garden. It will be updated and back in print in a few years.
>
> Both alpine and musk strawberries survive my Zone 5 winters.
>
> Lee
> Lee Reich, PhD
> Come visit my farmden at
> http://www.leereich.com/blog <http://www.leereich.com/blog>
> http://leereich.com <http://leereich.com/>
>
> Books by Lee Reich:
> •The Ever Curious Gardener: Using a Little Natural Science for a Much Better Garden
> •A Northeast Gardener's Year
> •The Pruning Book
> •Weedless Gardening
> •Uncommon Fruits for every Garden
> •Landscaping with Fruit
> •Grow Fruit Naturally
> °New!! Growing Figs in Cold Climates
>
>> On Aug 5, 2022, at 12:16 PM, Bors, Bob <bob.bors@usask.ca> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Henry,
>>
>> The musk strawberry Fragaria moschata is super cold hardy.
>> In my grad school days in Ontario, I recall we had a freak early winter rainfall that fell on frozen ground.
>> Plants stayed imbedded in ice most of the winter.
>> This killed off a huge % strawberries, but not F. Mochata. It did fine.
>>
>> Its musky flavor is somewhat like concord grapes.
>> Berries can be as big as an inch.
>> It has 6 chromosomes while regular strawberries have 8.
>> Although an accession or two have complete flowers, mostly they have male and female plants. So that would be problematic to sell both types.
>> I'm not sure where to get them commercially.
>> I got some from the genebank in Corvallis years ago. I don't have them anymore.
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>>
>> Bob Bors, Ph.D.
>> Assistant Professor
>> Head of the Fruit Program
>> Dept. of Plant Sciences
>> 51 Campus Drive
>> Saskatoon, SK S7N 5A8 Canada
>> www.fruit.usask.ca
>>
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: nafex <nafex-bounces+bob.bors=usask.ca@lists.ibiblio.org> On Behalf Of Henry via nafex
>> Sent: Thursday, August 4, 2022 9:33 PM
>> To: mailing list at ibiblio - Northamerican Allied Fruit Experimenters <nafex@lists.ibiblio.org>
>> Cc: Henry <treehugger53ah@yahoo.com>
>> Subject: [nafex] strawberry info
>>
>> CAUTION: External to USask. Verify sender and use caution with links and attachments. Forward suspicious emails to phishing@usask.ca
>>
>>
>> I buy plants for the Friends School Plant Sale in Saint Paul, Minnesota.
>>
>> Strawberries were very popular last year and sold out quickly, so we want to add some new varieties.
>>
>> A customer requested the European musk strawberry, but none of us know anything about it.
>>
>> Specifically, we want to know if it would be a good candidate for mid-continental Zone 4.
>>
>> --Henry Fieldseth
>> Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA
>> http://www.FriendsSchoolPlantSale.com
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