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Old 03-06-2011, 08:06 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Feb 2007
Posts: 437
Default Winter radish mistakenly sown in spring


"echinosum" wrote in
message ...

I didn't realise that one of the varieties of radish I
bought was a
winter radish. (I'm not sure even now how large the bulb
is supposed to
grow, it's called "Red Flesh" and is a Japanese variety.)
So I sowed
alongside the normal stuff in April, thinned it to 1 to 2
inches, like
the normal stuff. It has grown tall, with a thick central
stem, is
flowering, and is not producing any root bulb volume.
Normal radish
treated the same way is giving me a crop.

What should I do with this winter radish? Wait? Thin it
out to a wider
spacing and wait? Cut off the central stem? Pull it all
out and throw it
away?


Eat the leaves, quite tasty chopped up as a stir-fry. Then
get rid of it. Sounds like it needs to be sown when it's
autumn and cold and wet.

I sowed two varieties about 1-1/2 months ago, one was
French, and has come to nothing much, because it has been so
dry and we were away. The other one was called an 18-day
radish or some such, and they look really round and tasty.
Going to try one now :-)

someone