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Propagating Strawberries from Runners — The Plant That Layers Itself
Bob

Creado por

Bob

4. julio 2026BE
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Propagating Strawberries from Runners — The Plant That Layers Itself

Let a strawberry plant clone itself for you. In summer it throws out RUNNERS — horizontal stems that carry baby plants, each of which roots where it touches the ground. Peg the daughter down while it's still fed by the mother, let it root, then snip it free as a new plant. A buildable school project in the runner (stolon) and natural layering.
Principiante
A few weeks in summer

Instrucciones

1

The plant that plants itself

A strawberry doesn't wait for you. In summer it sends out RUNNERS — long horizontal stems (stolons) that carry little baby plants along their length. Where a baby touches soil it puts down roots and becomes a whole new plant, an exact clone of the mother. Your job is just to help it happen where you want it.
2

Let the mothers throw runners

After the main crop finishes, healthy mother plants push out runners across the bed. Pick your propagation plants from strong, heavy-cropping, disease-free mothers only — whatever the mother carries, good or bad, is copied into every daughter.

Materiales para este paso:

StrawberryStrawberry1 plant
3

Peg down the first plantlet

The FIRST plantlet on a runner (nearest the mother) is the strongest — use that one. Sink a small pot of compost into the soil beneath it, sit the plantlet on the compost, and pin it down with a bent wire staple so its little node presses onto the moist soil. Leave it joined to the mother.

Materiales para este paso:

CompostCompost1 bag

Herramientas necesarias:

Bronze WireBronze Wire
4

Let it root while still attached

Keep the soil moist. Because the daughter stays connected to the mother by the runner, the mother keeps feeding and watering it while it grows its own roots — exactly like air layering, but along the ground. In two to four weeks it will be rooting firmly into the pot.
5

Sever from the mother

Once the plantlet is well rooted (a gentle tug meets resistance and you see fresh new leaves), cut the runner that joins it to the mother. It is now an independent young plant standing on its own roots.

Herramientas necesarias:

SecateursSecateurs
6

Lift and transplant

Lift the rooted daughter (or its sunk pot) and plant it into its new bed at the same depth — crown right at soil level, not buried, not perched. Water it in, label it, and keep it moist while it settles.

Materiales para este paso:

Adhesive LabelsAdhesive Labels1 hoja
7

Renew the patch every few years

Strawberry plants tire after about three years — less fruit, more disease — so root a fresh batch of runners each summer and start a new bed on clean ground, retiring the oldest. Only ever propagate from vigorous, healthy mothers, since viruses quietly build up down the generations of clones.
8

Compendium — the stolon and natural layering

A strawberry runner is a STOLON — a stem that grows sideways instead of upward, skimming along the soil surface, with a baby plant (a clone of the mother) waiting at each node. When that node meets moist ground it grows roots straight down and a rosette of leaves up, and a new strawberry plant is born. This is LAYERING done by the plant itself: it is the very same principle as air layering, where a stem roots while still attached to and fed by the parent, only here the strawberry lowers its own stem to the ground and does it automatically. That attachment is the whole advantage — the daughter can't wilt or starve while it roots, because the mother's supply line keeps flowing until the moment you cut it, so success is almost guaranteed (which is why this is the easiest clone a beginner can make). Like every runner, clove, cutting and graft, the daughter is genetically IDENTICAL to the mother, so the variety stays perfectly true — with the same clone catch that any virus in the mother is copied along, which is why you only ever propagate from healthy plants and why buying certified virus-free stock now and then keeps a patch productive. Many plants travel this way — spider plants, ajuga, and the strawberry's own wild ancestors — using stolons to march across open ground and colonise it. For the gardener it is a free, effortless nursery: peg down the babies you want, snip the rest off so the mothers put their strength into fruit, and a single good strawberry plant becomes a whole new bed in one summer.

Materiales

3

Herramientas requeridas

2

You can swap these in

Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.

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