🍓 Strawberry Sunlight Calculator
Find out exactly how much sun your strawberry plants need based on type, climate, and garden conditions
| Strawberry Type | Category | Min Sun (hrs) | Ideal Sun (hrs) |
|---|---|---|---|
| June-Bearing | Single Harvest | 6 | 8–10 |
| Everbearing | Multi Harvest | 6 | 6–8 |
| Day-Neutral | Continuous | 6 | 6–8 |
| Alpine | Shade Tolerant | 4 | 4–6 |
| Ornamental | Decorative | 4 | 4–6 |
| Climate Zone | Avg Summer Temp | Sun Adjustment | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hot (USDA 9–13) | 90°F+ / 32°C+ | Afternoon shade helps | Provide 30–40% shade cloth after 2pm |
| Warm (USDA 7–8) | 80–90°F / 27–32°C | Full sun ideal | No adjustment needed, peak growing zone |
| Moderate (USDA 5–6) | 70–80°F / 21–27°C | Maximize sun exposure | South-facing beds preferred |
| Cool (USDA 3–4) | 60–70°F / 16–21°C | Full sun essential | Use mulch to warm soil, choose June-bearing |
| Strawberry Type | Plant Spacing (in) | Row Spacing (ft) | Area Per Plant (ft²) |
|---|---|---|---|
| June-Bearing | 12–18 | 3–4 | 3.0–6.0 |
| Everbearing | 12 | 2–3 | 2.0–3.0 |
| Day-Neutral | 8–12 | 2–3 | 1.3–3.0 |
| Alpine | 8–10 | 1–2 | 0.7–1.7 |
| Ornamental | 10–12 | 1–2 | 0.8–2.0 |
| Strawberry Type | Harvest Pattern | Days to Fruit | Yield Per Plant |
|---|---|---|---|
| June-Bearing | One large harvest | 60–90 days | 1–2 lbs (0.5–0.9 kg) |
| Everbearing | 2–3 harvests/season | 60–75 days | 0.5–1 lb (0.2–0.5 kg) |
| Day-Neutral | Continuous harvest | 60–90 days | 0.5–1 lb (0.2–0.5 kg) |
| Alpine | Small continuous fruit | 90–120 days | 0.25–0.5 lb (0.1–0.2 kg) |
| Ornamental | Minimal fruit | 70–90 days | Grown for looks |
Strawberries are Strawberry Plant that loved the Sun. For good grow and give sweet, delicious berries, they need much direct sunshine each day. Usually one advises that the strawberries get at least six to eight hours of direct sunshine a day.
Some sources reckon that eight to ten hours, or even more, are even better. In spring and summer they can last ten or more hours of sunshine without any trouble.
How Much Sun Do Strawberries Need
The exposure to Sun directly decides when and how the strawberries flower and give fruits. Berries that grew in full sunshine usually are more sweet and tasty than those in half-shaded place. When there is not enough sunshine the Strawberry Plant commonly become stretched and ill.
Then they give fewer berries. In full shade strawberries simply give no fruits.
Home strawberries need more Sun than the wild types, because they form bigger berries in big amounts. On the other hand, the alpine strawberries manage to give fruits with only four hours of direct sunshine. The wild species Fragaria vesca adapt more well to shade than other wild strawberries, however most strawberries will not flour well, if they do not get at least average amount of direct sunshine.
Oddly, strawberries can live in shady surroundings. There are photos and videos about strawberries that grow under fruit trees in full shade. If one plants them in soil that drains well and is rich in dung, without competition of ugly grasses, they form dense sheets of dark green even without sunshine.
Even so, growing sheets and creating fruits are two entirely separate tasks.
A little amount of shade in the afternoon genuinely is useful during the warmest days of summer. Already six hours of Sun is considered full sunshine, and strawberries like a bit of rest against too much heat. They handle much Sun if one gives them enough water.
Keeping soil equally damp is important, especially in hot spots.
About hot spots: strawberries do well in pots and planters. The pot needs to be at least eight to ten inches deep. Even inside beside a window they still need those six to eight hours of sunshine.
When the window does not give enough light, one can use fake grow lights to help. Full spectrum grow lights try to copy the natural sunshine.
The ideal soil for strawberries is deep, sandy light ground full of organic stuff. It must not stay wet. Escape places that stay damp too long after spring.
A place with gentle slope works well. When berries stay covered by sheets, they sometimes do not ripen right, so it matters to leave them open to sunshine. Berriescommonly stay green before ripeness, and the Sun helps them change in that phase.
