I must admit, I always trim the root because they drop easier into the holes.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Leeks
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Jay-ell View PostOn Beachgrove Garden earlier this year they said that the reason they topped and tailed was to make the leeks easier to handle and plant.
But scientific comparison of the two methods has found no difference in resultant crop and, personally, I think (despite the evidence to the contrary!!) that reducing leaf and root must be setting the plant back, so I leave them be.K's Garden blog the story of the creation of our garden
Comment
-
Perhaps **I** should do half-and-half next year and see how the resultant crop comparesK's Garden blog the story of the creation of our garden
Comment
-
Hmmm ... I wonder what effect Top & Tail has on Leek transplants that are NOT up to Pencil Size? For smaller transplants I wonder if Top & Tail sets the plants back more and thus might account for leeks not getting to a decent size by the end of the season?K's Garden blog the story of the creation of our garden
Comment
-
Originally posted by Kristen View PostHmmm ... I wonder what effect Top & Tail has on Leek transplants that are NOT up to Pencil Size? For smaller transplants I wonder if Top & Tail sets the plants back more and thus might account for leeks not getting to a decent size by the end of the season?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Spuddie View PostLeeks Don't like me. I grow them from March plant them in late June. Top and tail em pop them in a hole and water them in and come October they still look like spring onions.
Thankyou
Try to keep the bed weed free as they don't like competition for nutrients.
So feed them well and I suppose if you also talk to them every day, they won't just like you, they will love you
p.s. there a growing guide on the GYO site Growing Leeks | How To Grow | Grow Your Own. Surprisingly enough, there is no reference at all to preparing the leek bed.
Comment
-
Preparing our leek bed we usually dig in a load of home made compost (nitrogen rich FYM apparently encourages rust). Then using a draw hoe, make a trench four or five inches deep, earthing the soil up on each side. Next tread down the base of the trench and dib five inch deep holes for the leeks about nine inches apart. Water in the young plants to get a bit of soil round the roots but don't fill the holes in. Over the following weeks as you hoe weeds from the sides of the ridges soil will fill in the trench leaving a level bed and encouraging a leek blanch of eight to ten inches. I find it most workable to make two rows at a time, a foot apart so you can straddle the rows to weed.
Just wish I could find a practical organic way to protect from leek moth and allium miner.Location ... Nottingham
Comment
-
Originally posted by Mr Bones View PostJust wish I could find a practical organic way to protect from leek moth and allium miner.
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Alison View PostEnviromesh would work a treat by simply excluding the little blightersLocation ... Nottingham
Comment
-
Fleece might do for Leaf Miner (assuming you are more likely to have that lying around than miles of Enviromesh ). Leaf Miner only active twice a year I think? In Spring I don't think it is a problem as my plants are still seedlings, in a tray, and I would easily see if they were invaded at that stage, second generation is Oct-Nov I think, and the Leek Moth is a bit earlier - August onwards perhaps? - in which case might be do-able to cover with Fleece just for that period?K's Garden blog the story of the creation of our garden
Comment
-
I've started them off indoors and potted the seedlings on into their own three centimetre compartments in a tray on a windowsill. Should I now be getting them into a cold greenhouse as their original vigour seems to have slowed.
Would you do the same with cabbage seedlings and onions?
Thanks
Comment
Latest Topics
Collapse
Recent Blog Posts
Collapse
Comment