Raintree offers the most flavorful strawberries that are also easy to grow and disease resistant. Don’t expect to find the flavorless commercial varieties here. Instead, choose among luscious June-bearing types and incredibly productive “day neutral” varieties that begin bearing in June and bear heavily from July until fall frosts. We also offer Musk, Lipstick and Alpine strawberries that make great groundcovers. All the varieties we offer are proven in the Pacific Northwest and most of the nation.
3 OR MORE BNDLS of 25/ $8.50/EA; 10 OR MORE BNDLS of 25/ $6.50/EA; 25 OR MORE BNDLS of 25/ 5.00/EA Super easy to grow, this variety tolerates wetter conditions and scoffs at disease problems. In late June, large, flavorful, bright red strawberries offer both wonderful fresh eating and good results for freezing.
3 OR MORE BNDLS of 25/ $8.50/EA; 10 OR MORE BNDLS of 25/ $6.50/EA; 25 OR MORE BNDLS of 25/ 5.00/EA Enjoy success with this highly flavorful, disease resistant, early season strawberry that is particularly useful in the Northeast and upper Midwest where red stele root rot can be a problem. Deep red berries are medium size and very sweet, either eaten fresh or frozen. USDA Zones 5-9.
This new cultivar is unique in its ability to produce prolific crops of large, intensely delicious berries, even when others fail because of high humidity and scorching temperatures. An ideal selection for the South, for growing in a greenhouse, or for drawing rave reviews in all parts of the nation, day neutral Eversweet will defy expectations with non-stop crops of sweet, luscious berries from spring through fall. USDA Zone 6-10.
In addition to making a beautiful groundcover in sun or partial shade, these exceptionally productive plants bear intensely sweet fruit that is renowned in France for making delicious pastries or for dropping into a glass of champagne. Berries are large for an alpine type, up to an inch long, and you will get plenty for fresh eating. 4' pots.
Beautiful, upright plants, about 8 inches tall, are exceptional additions to the edible landscape, in rockeries, border plantings and other sites where they will fill in and cover an area quickly. The everbearing plants produce 3/4 inch, elongated, red berries with sweet flavor. First cultivated 250 years ago in France, these Alpine natives grow well in either sun or shade. Space them about one foot apart. 4 inch pots.