This is a public-interest archive. Personal data is pseudonymized and retained under GDPR Article 89.

Re: Alpine strawberries $$$


Thanks to Darryl and Sheryl for their information on Alpine Strawberry
sources. I would like the address for JL Huson, please. I checked into the
other 2 sources as soon as I got your posts.

Debby

>------------------------------
>Date: Sun, 11 Jan 1998 08:17:33 -0800
>From: Darryl Clark <autores@iname.com>
>To: veggie-list@eskimo.com
>Subject: Re: Alpine strawberries $$$
>Message-ID: <34B8F09D.67C6@iname.com>
>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>
>Hello Deborah:
>
>Pinetree gardens and JL Hudson, sell inexpensive seeds for "reugen"
>alpine strawberry.  I'm trying them for the first time this year,  so no
>info as yet.  I,ve seen other varieties in other catalogs, but these two
>sources were the least expensive I've encountered.
>
>Darryl
>
>pinetree= <http://www.maine.com/seeds/Welcome.html>
>JL hudson has no web or phone access, let me know if you want address
>(his catalog is pretty good).
>
>
>Deborah Shanahan wrote:
>>
>> As long as there's a strawberry thread, let me run it along in another
>> direction. Edible landscaping and natural landscaping are usually at odds
>> with each other. Alpine strawberries are one of the few plants to unite the
>> objectives of both. It would be great to plant a few hundred of these
>> plants at woodland edges and in rock gardens, but who could afford it? So
>> far the only prices I've seen for alpine strawberries list them at 10 times
>> the cost of "regular" strawberries. Does anybody know of relatively
>> inexpensive sources?
>>
>> Debby
>
>------------------------------
>Date: Sun, 11 Jan 1998 07:27:13 -0700
>From: Sheryl Williams <srwillms@gj.net>
>To: Veggie List <veggie-list@eskimo.com>
>Subject: Re: Alpine strawberries $$$
>Message-ID: <34B8D6C1.52022346@gj.net>
>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
>Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>
>I got a package of seeds from Burpee last year in with a "Butterfly
>Garden" group
>of seeds.  They did really well and are still looking pretty good even
>with temps
>to 4 F.
>Sheryl in Western Colorado
>
>Darryl Clark wrote:
>
>> Hello Deborah:
>>
>> Pinetree gardens and JL Hudson, sell inexpensive seeds for "reugen"
>> alpine strawberry.  I'm trying them for the first time this year,  so no
>> info as yet.  I,ve seen other varieties in other catalogs, but these two
>> sources were the least expensive I've encountered.
>>
>> Darryl
>>
>> pinetree= <http://www.maine.com/seeds/Welcome.html>
>> JL hudson has no web or phone access, let me know if you want address
>> (his catalog is pretty good).
>>
>> Deborah Shanahan wrote:
>> >
>> > As long as there's a strawberry thread, let me run it along in another
>> > direction. Edible landscaping and natural landscaping are usually at odds
>> > with each other. Alpine strawberries are one of the few plants to
>>unite the
>> > objectives of both. It would be great to plant a few hundred of these
>> > plants at woodland edges and in rock gardens, but who could afford it? So
>> > far the only prices I've seen for alpine strawberries list them at 10
>>times
>> > the cost of "regular" strawberries. Does anybody know of relatively
>> > inexpensive sources?
>> >
>> > Debby
>




Other Mailing lists | Author Index | Date Index | Subject Index | Thread Index