
Everbearing Strawberries 
Including Gemzata, Mastodon, Streamliner, Green Mountain, Gem, 
Evermore or 1166, Brunes Marvel, Superfection, and an unnamed variet 
which makes a moderate amount of runners and bushes just a little. It 
may have a big future if it gets a good name because it has good flavor 
and it picks clean without a stem, with a few exceptions. The Wayzata 
or Rockhill No. 26 is the ideal Strawberry of all the above everbearing 
varieties when it is given adequate irrigation. Generally speaking ever- 
bearing varieties seldom bear well unless they get extra water. 
The Wayzata everbearing is a large berry, fine flavor, and easy to 
pick because it is bush type. You will have no trouble keeping runners 
cut because there are few or no runners. 
Price __.....$8.00 per hundred. Wayzata Divisions _____ $5.00 per hundred 
If you water divisions often, they will grow. If you neglect to water 
them during a dry spell, the loss will be much greater than on runner 
plants. After a few weeks the difference disappears. : 
Prices on al] other everbearing varieties — 
25 plants for $1.00 or $2.00 per hundred if supply permits. 
JUNE BEARING STRAWBERRIES 
Senator: Dunlapeaetac! 2 <a ee eee seems $1.00 per 100; $5.00 per 1000 
Catskill, Red Star, Fairfax, Robinson, Premier... $2.00 per 100 
Locate patch in full sun where ground has slight slope so the plants 
can be watered between the rows. 
Superphosphate is nearly always beneficial as a fertilizer as for most . 
fruits. ‘Tests indicate my ground is also helped with borax, copper, zinc, | 
urea, and nitrogen. 
New Mulchless Method of growing Everbearing Strawberries 
has proven successful for nine years. 
Many plants die in winter from lack of moisture especially everbearing 
strawberries. By watering early in the spring and often until late fall this 
cause is avoided. Mulch often contains seed of plants that are a nuisance 
and also often provides a hatching place for white grub worms, the worst 
enemy of strawberries that I have encountered. 
If watering in late fall is impossible, mulching may be necessary; but 
mice and moles often burrow under the mulch. 
Roses and many other plants die from lack of water in winter. 
The correct amount of water varies with other conditions, but experience 
is a great teacher. 
But the fact remains that most plants will drown if given too much 
water and most of them will die if they cannot get moisture. 
