T W A U ... The Chase....today's...
Film, Media & TV1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The hardiness to both weather conditions and diseases rather depends on the varietal of plant you are using. There are three, June-bearers, Day-neutral and everbearing. I've found the June-bearing plants are the best. As the name implies, the produce fruit beginning in June and it lasts for about a month, perhaps a little longer. They seem to be stronger plants and the quality of the berries is uperior.
Even with that, you may find that 3 to 4 years is about the life of a bed. Diseases, such as verticillium wilt, can infect seemingly healthy beds.
We've wintered such varieties and our temperatures sometime reach -20 F. We mulch them heavily for winter, renovate the beds in the spring and mulch with grass clippings all summer. Not as hard as I've made it sound...
Best of luck!