Strawberry Growing Guide — Hydroponic Cultivation with Coco Peat Substrate in India

Strawberry is one of the most popular hydroponic crops in India — and for good reason. With the right substrate and consistent EC management, commercial growers across Mahabaleshwar, Himachal Pradesh, and Ooty are producing premium-quality berries year-round.

This guide walks you through substrate setup, EC and pH management by growth stage, and the most common problems Indian strawberry growers face.

Strawberry Farming in India — What You Need to Know First

Strawberry cultivation in India spans from the hillside farms of Mahabaleshwar and Himachal Pradesh to year-round polyhouse operations in Ooty. The hydroponic growbag system using coco peat substrate has become the standard for commercial production — it gives growers precise control over moisture, EC, and drainage.

Strawberry is a shallow-rooted, moisture-sensitive crop. It needs consistent moisture at the root zone — any dry period during flowering or fruiting directly reduces fruit size and uniformity. At the same time, it cannot tolerate waterlogging. The substrate must balance both.

At a Glance

Crop type Annual/perennial berry — typically run as an annual in Indian conditions
Crop cycle 6–8 months crop cycle
Growing system Hydroponic growbag — 100×20×12 cm
Growing regions Mahabaleshwar, Himachal Pradesh, Ooty, Kashmir Valley, Nainital
Season North India: Plant Oct–Nov, Harvest Jan–Mar
Farm types Small polyhouse to large commercial operations

Step 1 — Setting Up Your Coco Peat Substrate

Strawberry needs high water holding capacity — it is a moisture-loving crop with shallow roots that cannot buffer long dry periods. At the same time, it needs adequate drainage to prevent root rot. AquaHold (100% coco peat) is the primary recommendation.

Which Kultyv Blend to Use

Recommended blend Kultyv AquaHold (100% coco peat) — maximum WHC
Alternative blend Kultyv RootPrime (70:30) for warmer zones with higher irrigation frequency
Growbag size 100×20×12 cm — designed for strawberry’s shallow root system
Wash grade Triple Washed — EC < 0.5 mS/cm (strawberry is very salt sensitive)
Substrate EC target < 0.5 mS/cm before planting

🔗 Kultyv AquaHold — Maximum moisture retention — 100% coco peat — highest WHC for strawberry
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🔗 Kultyv Strawberry Growbag 100×20×12 cm — Crop-matched growbag for strawberry root depth
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How to Prepare Your Substrate — Step by Step

Step 1. Place Kultyv AquaHold blocks in the 100×20×12 growbag.
Step 2. Rehydrate slowly with clean water — EC < 0.5 mS/cm, pH 5.8–6.0. Add 4–5 litres per kg.
Step 3. Allow 15–20 minutes for full rehydration and expansion.
Step 4. Check substrate EC — should be < 0.5 mS/cm. If higher, flush with more clean water.
Step 5. Check substrate pH — target 5.5–6.0. Adjust with pH-up or pH-down as needed.
Step 6. Pre-buffer with Cal-Mag (2 mL/L) — soak 30 minutes, drain, then plant.

✓ Substrate EC must be below 0.5 mS/cm before planting — strawberry roots are highly sensitive to salt.
✓ Use the 100×20×12 cm growbag — a minimum of 2 litres of substrate per plant is recommended for commercial strawberry.
✓ Never compact the substrate when filling growbags — keep it loose for adequate AFP.

Step 2 — EC and pH Targets by Growth Stage

Strawberry EC management changes significantly between vegetative growth and fruiting. Too high EC during establishment damages young roots. EC is raised gradually as the plant develops. Consistent pH around 5.8–6.0 is essential for calcium uptake — which prevents blossom end rot and tip burn.

Growth Stage Target EC Target pH Notes
Transplant (first 2 weeks) 0.8–1.2 5.8–6.0 Very low EC to avoid transplant shock
Vegetative growth 1.2–1.5 5.8–6.2 Gradual increase as plant establishes
Flowering 1.5–2.0 5.8–6.0 Consistent EC — fluctuation causes flower drop
Fruiting 1.8–2.5 5.8–6.2 Higher EC concentrates sugars in fruit

✓ Keep EC consistent during flowering — any sudden rise or drop can cause blossom drop.
✓ Higher temperature = lower EC. In hot months, reduce EC by 0.3–0.5 mS/cm to compensate.
✓ Measure leachate EC at least twice a week during peak fruiting. Target leachate EC: 0.5 above irrigation EC.

🔗 Free EC & pH Suggester Tool — Enter your crop and stage — get your exact targets
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Common Problems and How to Fix Them

These are the most common issues strawberry growers face when using coco peat substrate — and how to address them.

Problem: Blossom Drop

Cause: Sudden EC fluctuation or moisture stress during flowering causes plants to abort developing flowers.
Fix: Maintain steady EC 1.5–2.0 mS/cm during flowering. Ensure substrate never dries out between irrigations — AquaHold’s high WHC helps significantly.

Problem: Tip Burn on Leaves

Cause: Calcium deficiency caused by inconsistent moisture or high root zone EC blocking Ca uptake.
Fix: Maintain pH at 5.8–6.0 for optimal calcium availability. Reduce EC if above 2.5. Ensure consistent irrigation frequency — avoid long dry gaps.

Problem: Root Rot

Cause: Overwatering in warm conditions creating anaerobic root zone. More common in summer polyhouse setups.
Fix: Reduce irrigation frequency. Ensure growbag drainage holes are open and clear. Consider switching to RootPrime (70:30) in warmer growing periods for better drainage.

Quick Tips for Strawberry Growers

✓ Remove runners regularly — runners drain energy from the mother plant and reduce fruit production.
✓ In warmer months, increase irrigation frequency rather than EC — keep the substrate moist without excess salt.
✓ Flush substrate with clean water once every 3–4 weeks to prevent salt buildup.
✓ Use a drip emitter per plant — not a single dripper per bag — for even moisture distribution.
✓ Check strawberry substrate EC at transplant. If above 0.5 mS/cm despite using washed grade, flush again before planting.

Ready to Set Up Your Strawberry Substrate System?

Talk to our team — we will recommend the right Kultyv blend and growbag for your strawberry variety and farm location.

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