Moving into my third year growing and want to grow some as 4 of us like them. With a very windy site I am looking at Early Half Tall and Seven Hills. What would be the closest spacing you would recommend? I am using raised and edged beds and normally plant at close spacing.
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Well i do not normally answer questions on raised bed growing because it is not my type of gardening but i would not plant any closer than 15 inches apart and i would stake them and tie them to the stakes and do not forget the netting over the top to keep them pesky Pigeons away....jacobWhat lies behind us,And what lies before us,Are tiny matters compared to what lies Within us ...
Ralph Waide Emmerson
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Thanks for that. The packet says 60-75cm(24-30") so I thought I could go a bit closer. My other thought was to use a Snadger approach and stick one in wherever there was a space which would probably give me more plants but be a lot more difficult to protect.History teaches us that history teaches us nothing. - Hegel
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Originally posted by oldie View PostThanks for that. The packet says 60-75cm(24-30") so I thought I could go a bit closer. My other thought was to use a Snadger approach and stick one in wherever there was a space which would probably give me more plants but be a lot more difficult to protect.
chrisc
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I've tried to grow Brussel Sprouts for years without much success.They always grew spindly or the sprouts blew!
Last year I forsake the traditional heritage varieties and went for two F1's to try and give a succession.
I had & have really good results from Maximus F1 & Trafalgar F1. I am still cropping both of these varieties now and have done for about 3 months!
I have already purchased this years Brussel Sprouts seed..............and guess which two varieties I've went for!!!!!
PS Mine are growing about 15 inches apart in pockets of 5 plants but this year I may plant them as dot plants all over my plot!Last edited by Snadger; 26-01-2010, 06:38 PM.My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order
to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE)
Diversify & prosper
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I grew some great Brussels this year, I think they were Maximus but can't really remember. I just planted them through membrane, about 15" apart, didn't stake at all, netted them, and basically left them. It was probably beginners luck as it was my first year on the allotment and I didn't really know what I was doing. Had a very good crop (still cropping in fact) which was the envy of some of the more experienced growers on the site. My site is fairly exposed but I found the worst of the winds came when the plants were well established so they coped bless 'em.
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Mine are 12 inces apart and the rows only 4 inches apart. I grew 20 plants like that and they all did well. Similar spacings for the curly kale too.
However if you are going to grow them that close you need to start them off in pots and transplant at about 6 inches high.
You also need to stuff the bed full of goodness. I used a mix of chicken manure, used hops, old grow bags, fresh horse manure, straw and mushroom compost.
There is a picture on my site of them growing. I was really impressed with the results but it was a lot of effort !
Good luck
JJ
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On the advice of Sarzwix I am trying Falstaff this year. I reckon, after experiments with yellow toms, white beetroot and rainbow carrots I may just get one of the grandkids to eat them for Christmas dinner, which they come here for.
If it doesn't work I am sending all the grandkids (I think there are about 40 of them, or it seems that way) to Sarz house for New Year (and Easter etc.)Why didn't Noah just swat those 2 greenflies?
Why are they called apartments when they are all stuck together?
>
>If flying is so safe, why do they call the airport the terminal?
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Give them space if you can spare it. I intercropped mine with PSB's and had massive problems with aphids mildew. Trying to be organic I didn't spray with anything and just had to put up with spending ages preparing the sprouts to eat.
Not sure what variety I grew but I had good results and will grow more again this year but will give them room. Any ideas on a safe method of keeping them aphid and caterpillar free? I've got netting for the pidgeons.
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Originally posted by oldie View Post... I'm going to try 12"each way. That will give me 12 plants.Should be enough for us.
The trouble with Brussels is that if they find themselves stressed the sprouts will "blow"... in other words, instead of getting a nice tight sprout you get a set of small leaves looking like a fully open rose flower.
At 12" spacing you may get sprouts; but you may find that they all "blow".
So by being "greedy" you don't end up with anything to eat at all... it is sometimes better to aim for a smaller crop and space further apart to increase your chances of getting something edible.
Many people have heard that you can plant closer together with raised beds but this is largely a fallacy; raised beds generally have good drainage and have been fertilised recently and stocked with good compost so plants do florish but the same would happen in open ground that is well drained and well fertilised.
You can raise the bed and feed the soil but you can't change the other factor that plants need.... light!!! Light, or rather the shade each plant gives to the next plant, is often the limiting factor in plant spacing not soil condition.
If your site is windy then stake each plant extremely well; any rocking of the plant in the wind will cause the sprouts to blow.
If you want to compare, maybe you could try a few plants spaced further apart and see which do better?The proof of the growing is in the eating.
Leave Rotten Fruit.
Nitrogen, Phosphorus, Potasium - potash.
Autant de têtes, autant d'avis!!!!!
Il n'est si méchant pot qui ne trouve son couvercle.
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Originally posted by teakdesk View PostThe trouble with Brussels is that if they find themselves stressed the sprouts will "blow"... in other words, instead of getting a nice tight sprout you get a set of small leaves looking like a fully open rose flower.
At 12" spacing you may get sprouts; but you may find that they all "blow".
So by being "greedy" you don't end up with anything to eat at all... it is sometimes better to aim for a smaller crop and space further apart to increase your chances of getting something edible.
Many people have heard that you can plant closer together with raised beds but this is largely a fallacy; raised beds generally have good drainage and have been fertilised recently and stocked with good compost so plants do florish but the same would happen in open ground that is well drained and well fertilised.
You can raise the bed and feed the soil but you can't change the other factor that plants need.... light!!! Light, or rather the shade each plant gives to the next plant, is often the limiting factor in plant spacing not soil condition.
If your site is windy then stake each plant extremely well; any rocking of the plant in the wind will cause the sprouts to blow.
If you want to compare, maybe you could try a few plants spaced further apart and see which do better?
What variety do you recommend?"Orinoco was a fat lazy Womble"
Please ignore everything I say, I make it up as I go along, not only do I generally not believe what I write, I never remember it either.
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