Sorry about the thread title but It sums up what this is about.
Rightly or wrongly I always strip the husk from my shallots once they are established and the husk is still moist. I've never seen this mentioned in gardeneing books but it works for me. The husk is no longer feeding the plant by now and just rots.
What invariably happens is the shallots seem to be confined by the husk and as soon as it gets warm it dries out and constricts their growth.
If its carefully stripped off you can almost hear the plant give a sigh of relief, like when a woman takes a corset off!
Anyone else go shallot stripping?
Rightly or wrongly I always strip the husk from my shallots once they are established and the husk is still moist. I've never seen this mentioned in gardeneing books but it works for me. The husk is no longer feeding the plant by now and just rots.
What invariably happens is the shallots seem to be confined by the husk and as soon as it gets warm it dries out and constricts their growth.
If its carefully stripped off you can almost hear the plant give a sigh of relief, like when a woman takes a corset off!
Anyone else go shallot stripping?
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