In the Strawberry Berry Field: July 9th, 2025 RENOVATION

Wednesday, July 9, 2025

 

Sorry guys, no video this week.   On a side note, if anyone finds a black camera case in their strawberry field, please let me know.  

The strawberry season is wrapping for many.   The hot weather has really hastened the maturity on many varieties in the valley.    There has also been some sunscald particularly on strawberries in the valley area with smaller canopies.   This was mostly caused by extreme heat on June 24th.

Movement has been very good through most of the season, with only this week showing any signs of a price weakening.  Now that the major chains are off ad, with consumers belly’s full, demand may slow down a little.

So for some growers it is a good time to be done and move onto the renovation process.  The renovation process is very important in setting up next year’s yield.  It is very important not to get lost in process and keep an eye on the goals:

-Maintain optimal plant density and canopy structure.

-Promote runner growth and renew fruiting crown health.   This maybe important for some growers after 2024’s establishment year left some stands thinner than they should be.

-Reduce disease and pest pressure by improving airflow and sanitation.

-Establish a strawberry plant ready to produce floral buds on August 20th.  Why is this date important?   The amount of day length switches from 12 hours of sunlight to longer than 12 hours of night, causing the plant to initiate fruit bud development.   If we are still trying to establish the plant at this time of year, it will not maximize the number of fruit buds.

I have sent around a table on the renovation process in the past and you can find it by clicking here.

For a little more information on the process please take the time to read through the steps below:

 

  1. Assess and Terminate as Needed

-Decide what stays vs. what is terminated.

 -Terminate using Roundup + broad-spectrum insecticide if necessary.

- After termination it would be a great time to plant some warm season cover crop like pearl millet in order to get the field in shape for the next crop

  1. Disease and Insect Protection (Pre-Herbicide)

-We typically want to jump right into herbicide application, but lets pause and think about when the last time was that we looked for or applied an aphidicide? Maybe we should have a look for aphids, apply some water to relieve plant stress or think about root diseases.   Another insect we may want to have a look for this time of year is the root weevil adult, which could be feeding on the foliage leaving their tell tale “c” shaped wholes in the leaves.

-Now maybe a good time to apply an aphicide like Admire and a fungicide like one of the phosphites for root health. 

  1. Weed Control Herbicide (Before Mowing)

               Choose one:

-2,4-D @ 0.6 L/ac → Mow in 2–3 days

-Lontrel XC @ 120 mL/ac → Mow in 7–10 days

2,4-D is good on common annuals. Lontrel is tougher on vetch, clovers and sheep sorrel.

-If weeds aren’t bad hand removal may be the route to take.

  1. Mow (as above, based on herbicide choice)

-Make sure not to cause crown damage while mowing. Mow 1.4-2 inches above the crowns.

  1. Fertilization

-Apply 50–60 units of N + P + K

       -Avoid 0-0-60 due to potential salt injury.

  1. Cyclamen Mite Control

-Look for Cyclamen mite under a microscope by examining the newly unfolding leaves.   This should be applied before the canopy gets too large and impacts coverage.

-Agri-Mek or Magister plus surfactant

-Apply ~2 weeks after herbicide

  1. Residual Weed Control

-5 days after Agri-Mek or Magister, apply Sinbar during rainfall

  1. Grassy Weed Control

-10 days after Sinbar, apply Poast or Venture

  • Avoid overlap with Sinbar this helps to avoid increased uptake of the sinbar leading to damage:

-Wait 10–14 days between Sinbar and 2,4-D/Lontrel

-Wait 10–14 days between Sinbar and Venture

-Wait 5–7 days between Sinbar and Agri-Mek

9. Ongoing maintain fungicide applications for:

-Powdery mildew

-Leaf spot

-Anthracnose

 

Some tricks performed by some growers:

-Aliette or another phosphite pre-herbicide to restore root health.

-Apogee to suppress excess runner formation if the stand is very dense.

-Chain harrow to thin old crowns and reduce density.   This is only used in older and dense stands.

-Ignite (glufosinate) for weed control and row narrowing.

        -Deep ripping/tillage to alleviate compaction and improve drainage between rows.   This can alleviate black root rot and improve root health.  

        -Provide 1 inch of water per week (rain or irrigation) after renovation to support plant recovery and nutrient uptake.