Good—simple choices for a better life

Article illustration

Plan for your pav

Home » Magazine » Good, issue 6 » Plan for your pav

Prep now for the Christmas pav

Every year, the Christmas decorations seem to go up earlier at the shops—but retailers have nothing on gardeners. With nine months till Christmas, it’s high time to start thinking about what you’ll put on top of your pav.

In the productive garden, preparation is everything. For  good produce year-round, you need to think ahead.

April and May are the perfect months for preparing and planting a strawberry bed. Get one in now and you’ll be set up for the delectable pleasure of fragrant, freckled, red strawberries next summer.

Strawberry plants are as hungry for nutrients as we are for their delicious berries, so once you’ve located a site with good exposure to sunlight, cram your bed with well-rotted compost, animal manure and/or sheep pellets. Whatever you use, dig it in until it’s well mixed and the soil level has visibly risen by around 15 centimetres. This vital shot of nutrients should get plants off to a good start and will also provide that little extra acidity strawberries like.

Depending on your soil type, you might place your strawberry plants on mounded ridges of soil. Mounding ensures good drainage—a must for productive plants—in stickier, clay soils. It also assists with air circulation, which helps prevent disease, but is not essential if you have free-draining soil.

Mounds can be around 15 centimetres high and 30 to 45 centimetres wide at their base. Run your rows or ridges from north to south to achieve even ripening, allowing about 40 centimetres between each plant.

Strawberry plants can be purchased from garden centres and many health food shops—or, better still, create your own by using runners from established plants. These look like elongated leaf stems that come from the base of the plant, but develop small plantlets which then take root.
In the first season of a plant’s growth, remove the runners. In the second season, they can be allowed to form roots. Separate runners by cutting the stems attaching them to the host plant, then lift from the soil and replant nearby as fresh fruiting stock.

Most plants will remain productive for three seasons before becoming spent.

Once your bed is planted, there are a few maintenance tips. In spring pick all early fruit to encourage strong leaf growth—the plants should then go on to produce luscious strawberries in summer. As the fruit begins to form, lay a mulch of straw, pine needles or untreated, fine wood shavings beneath the plants to prevent any berries rotting.

The mulch also slows weeds and retains vital moisture.
Birds have a keen eye for strawberries so some form of protective netting is worthwhile. Depending on how well you’ve composted the ground, you may need to feed your strawberries. Liquid seaweed makes an excellent foliar feed, or use a slower-acting alternative such as blood and bone meal.

Add your comment

Anonymous comments are queued before publishing and it may take some time before they appear. Please consider creating an account and your comment will appear automatically. If you already have an account, please log in.








If you have trouble reading the code, click on the code itself to generate a new random code
 

More Goodness

The Good blog
  • Winter pick-me-ups
    article illustration

    As gloomy weather sets in, it's the little things that lift your mood. Like these candy-coloured retro leather purses from Green With Envy – a splash of gorgeousness on the daily shop. And we've got two to give away!

  • How to get rid of oxalis?
    article illustration

    Good's new gardening expert Zoe Carafice is ready and waiting to solve your dilemmas! Each question published on Zoe's blog or in Good receives a fab prize from Tui Garden. This week: how to eradicate oxalis bulbs.

  • One good reason to skip lunch
    article illustration

    Plenty of food that’s good enough to eat (but not good enough to sell) is disposed of every day. Kaibosh Food Rescue is aiming to change all that by collecting extra food and distributing it to charities. Now they're calling on Kiwis to donate the cost of a meal on Miss a Meal in May Day – so they can expand their mission to help out the hungry.

Good magazine
  • Urban harvest
    article illustration

    Could you live off the land? Nancy Howie travels to Canada to discover how one grassroots movement is redefining the suburban dream.

  • Where has fracking been allowed on the East Coast?
    article illustration

    Armed with exploration licenses issued by the New Zealand government, Tag Oil and its partner Apache intend to extract oil and gas from the East Coast. See the map here >

  • Man-made earthquakes
    article illustration

    Is it possible for human activity to cause quakes? One investigation in Blackpool, England discovered that more than fifty tremors in the region were caused by fracking operations. Read the article >

article illustration

Latest issue

Discover what gives your home soul, tips for easy entertaining and making favourite clothes last longer. Find latest research on honey for health and the brainiest breakfasts, plus guides to greenwashing, distilling and the best loo paper to buy.

Follow us

Latest comments

  • Charlotte on Free event + win this gorgeous organic cotton bib!:
    Cute as bib! Our gorgeous wee girl would look so cute wearing it :) She is just over 3 mths old and we are starting to think about solids an  
  • Anne on Winter pick-me-ups:
    To survive the cold winter wear wool next to the skin, pile the wood into the woodburner, cook winter soups on top and invite friends in. An  
  • Olivia Winter on Winter pick-me-ups:
    We live in a tiny old house that gets very cold! We lounge around in front of the fireplace in our onesies and our yearly bought novelty sli  
  • Olivia Winter on Spice up your breakfast:
    When I was a child I used to go to my grandparents claybrick house on Waiheke and the first morning I was there nana would bring me breakfas  
  • Vicki Olsen on Winter pick-me-ups:
    Wear lightweight but warm layers of merino clothing, and eat lots of warming soups and crockpot meals.  Get outside on sunny days to bo  
  • Pam Harrison on Winter pick-me-ups:
    Comfort food.  Home made winter soups are the best. Also the humble roast with lots of veggies, gravy and cheese sauce. I als  
  • Kama Scarf on Winter pick-me-ups:
    Open the doors and windows when the sun is shinning during winter to let some fresh air through the house.  Yummy scented candles also  
  • ck smith on Winter pick-me-ups:
    Love those Phoebe purse's, wonderful bright coloursMy best winter-proofing tip is never leave the house without a scarf, hat and gloves  

Blogs

Good pages

Good Shopping Handbook