Saturday, 8 May 2010

Asparagus!

Finally, a pickable crop of asparagus! Lovely, thick, strong stems in abundance. Unfortunately, only from 2 plants. The others are still alive, but the shoots are tiny and sparse in comparison.

I started this bed about 3 years ago. I initially planted with crowns in early spring, against my better judgement, as I know from experience how little asparagus likes being disturbed (see below). A few did try to grow, but withered within a few weeks of first showing their heads later in the Spring. It was an expensive and frustrating mistake.

Luckily I had planted some from seed the previous year, and was planning to use them to fill the gaps. The first ones are now growing strongly, but I'm still filling the space gradually with more batches of ones grown from seed, so it will be a while yet before I have a full bed full of mature plants. I'd never bother planting crowns again, seed is much more reliable and barely takes any longer to establish and bulk to cropping size. The only disadvantage is that the varieties available as seed are not as good as some of the newer, all-male ones commercially available as crowns.

Variety - mostly Martha Washington from T&M, but also one batch of Mary Washington from a vendor on eBay. I'm afraid I didn't keep note of which batch was which (initially I thought 'Mary' was just a miss-print of Martha; it is in fact a distinct cultivar and also an all-female one like Martha). With hindsight, it would have been better to have looked for an all male variety, but I couldn't find any available as seed at the time I was planning the bed.

My inlaws had a wonderful asparagus bed in the orchard of their 16th century farmhouse. This must have been well over 50 years old and still cropping reliably, although the bed had become a bit congested. My father-in-law had the bright idea of digging it up, thinning out the plants and giving the spares away, as quite a few people had expressed interest in having some crowns. However, the replanted crowns all died and rotted very rapidly, and the whole bed was lost. Very sad, but it  taught me the lesson, that asparagus crowns absolutely hate being moved. In contrast, the seed will sprout and survive in the least favourable places!

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