As soon as your strawberries have finished fruiting, it’s a good time to raise some new plants from their abundant runners – the long stems emerging from the main plant.
Find out everything you need to know about growing strawberries in our Grow Guide.
It’s also a good time to clear away all the straw or matting to discourage slugs and snails from nibbling at the plants. Do this now and you can look forward to more plants and a bumper harvest next summer.
Short of space? Discover our pick of the best strawberry planters.
Find out how to propagate strawberries from runners, below.
You Will Need
- Strawberry plant
- Sharp knife or secateurs
- Small pots
- Multi-purpose, peat-free compost
- U-shaped staple or garden wire
Total time:
Step 1
Choose a healthy runner which has produced one or more leaves, and remove any stems emerging from the new leaves, while keeping it still attached to the parent plant. Fill pots with multi-purpose compost. Place the strawberry runner on the surface and hold it in place using a u-shaped staple or a piece of wire.

Step 2
Keep the compost moist at all times. Don’t snip off the stem linking the new plant to its parent – keep this until the new plant has developed strong roots.

Step 3
As soon as the plants are strongly rooted, snip off the stem connecting it to the parent plant, and plant in into a larger pot, or out into prepared ground.

To help rooting, use a soil mix of three parts compost to one part sand.
Help the rooting process