Originally posted by Oleander
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PSB advice please
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Nell
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Originally posted by nelliegemini View PostLast time I grew them in one of my raised beds, but they took so long to mature that I lifted them and put them in pots when quite large (in about Jan I think) (against advice!) - only have a couple of raised beds so room is important. Luckily they thrived and cropped well. This time they have been in florist's buckets from first planting and are aaaallllmooost ready!Never say never!
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Originally posted by Oleander View PostOoooh interesting - buckets are the way to go then! I'll be sowing at the week-end! Did you just use multicompost?Nell
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Originally posted by nelliegemini View PostLast time I grew them in one of my raised beds, but they took so long to mature that I lifted them and put them in pots when quite large (in about Jan I think) (against advice!) - only have a couple of raised beds so room is important. Luckily they thrived and cropped well. This time they have been in florist's buckets from first planting and are aaaallllmooost ready!
I know they can suffer from wind rock so perhaps a supporting cane would help, and also, at the moment they are at the end of the garden. Hmmmmm, if they were in buckets I could move them nearer the back door as the weather gets cooler in autumn. Yep, definitely worth a think that one. Thanks for the idea.
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Originally posted by nelliegemini View PostLast time I grew them in one of my raised beds, but they took so long to mature that I lifted them and put them in pots when quite large (in about Jan I think) (against advice!) - only have a couple of raised beds so room is important. Luckily they thrived and cropped well. This time they have been in florist's buckets from first planting and are aaaallllmooost ready!
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I have been harvesting mine for around 2 weeks now. I grew them in a nursery bed and transferred them to their growing position last june/july. I put them in ground that had not been dug for years as an experiment and they loved it, the wind has taken some of them down to about 45 degrees but they are still solid. They were netted (the black stuff) all through the summer and winter so no pidg or flutterbys damage. this seems to have worked for me. 12 sown and 12 grown and survived."He that but looketh on a plate of ham and eggs to lust after it hath already committed breakfast with it in his heart"
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my first year for psb. think i will try a bit of everything from previous threads and see what happens. i will set aside a dedicated area for them and catchcrop with some salad stuff. pot some up and leave in a sheltered spot (these could be moved to where there others are if any casulties) and dot some about in the garden allotment. sorted!
just sowed some earky and late psb with some green calabrese for good measureLast edited by greendean; 26-03-2009, 12:46 PM.above the clouds the sun is shining and the sky is blue. if you look hard enough you can just about see it!
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I grew these last year and moved them to thin them out cos I dropped the pkt doh !! I lost a few but the ones that survived I have just picked this week and we had it for tea last night but OH and daughter didnt like it so I might not bother again cos they do take a long time and a lot of room.Gardening ..... begins with daybreak
and ends with backache
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Originally posted by feefeelalabelle View Posthi all, just been reading through ther thread and i get the impression that it takes about a year to get any brocolli off these, is this right? my plants are about 10cms tall now but i thought they would sprout this year. many thanks
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BUT it's harvested when there's less fresh stuff than usual. Also you can sow it in Spring and plant it out when early summer crops have been eaten - early spuds for example. So really you are using the ground twice. I think there's a lot to be said for it as a crop.Whoever plants a garden believes in the future.
www.vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated March 9th - Spring
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I'm trying these for the first time this year....not convinced though as I've seen other allotmenteers with PSB's and the produce is...well...only a dozen or so spears of produce for a large plant that sits there all year taking up room and sucking up nutients!
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Originally posted by Flummery View PostBUT it's harvested when there's less fresh stuff than usual. Also you can sow it in Spring and plant it out when early summer crops have been eaten - early spuds for example. So really you are using the ground twice. I think there's a lot to be said for it as a crop.
thats just sorted that out. seedbed then potato bed afterwards
do i need to fertilize between crops? if so what's best?
thanksabove the clouds the sun is shining and the sky is blue. if you look hard enough you can just about see it!
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Originally posted by greendean View Postthanks flum
do i need to fertilize between crops? if so what's best?
thanksWhoever plants a garden believes in the future.
www.vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated March 9th - Spring
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