Bushel and Berry Rosy Belle is an everbearing strawberry that rewrites the script for what a productive berry plant can look like. Unlike typical strawberries, it blooms in rosy-pink flowers from spring through fall, creating a dual-season display of ornamental beauty and edible fruit. Hardy from zones 4 to 8, this cascading variety reaches 9 to 18 inches tall and thrives in full sun, making it exceptional for hanging baskets, window boxes, and balcony planters where its graceful habit becomes a living decoration.
Full Sun
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4-8
18in H x ?in W
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High
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The rosy-pink blossoms are genuinely rare among strawberries, unfurling from spring through late fall as a striking contrast against deep green foliage. Its cascading, spreading growth habit means you can tuck it into hanging baskets or let it sprawl across raised beds without it looking overgrown or messy. Everbearing productivity means you're harvesting fruit continuously rather than in a single spring flush, extending your harvest window across the entire growing season.
Rosy Belle excels as an ornamental edible, bringing both visual appeal and fruit production to spaces where most berries would need to hide away. Container growing is where this variety truly shines, whether cascading from hanging baskets on a patio or tumbling over the edges of window boxes and balcony planters. The continuous everbearing habit means fresh strawberries for eating fresh throughout the season, not just a single harvest window.
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Transplant Rosy Belle after the last frost date in your zone, once soil has warmed. Space plants 12 to 18 inches apart in garden beds or use 12-inch-deep containers with rich potting soil for outstanding results.
Pick berries when they're fully red and slightly soft to the touch, usually in early morning when the fruit is coolest. The everbearing habit means you'll be harvesting from June through November in most growing zones, so check plants every few days as new berries ripen continuously. Gently twist or snip each berry with a short stem attached rather than pulling, which helps avoid damaging the delicate plant.
The cascading growth habit means you'll want to remove runners early in the season if you're growing Rosy Belle in containers and prefer a tidier mound. Once established and cascading naturally, prune only to remove dead flowers or damaged leaves unless you're trying to shape the plant for specific spaces. In mid-summer, some growers lightly thin excess foliage to improve air circulation and encourage continued blooming through fall.
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