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Old 31-08-2012, 02:19 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Baz[_3_] Baz[_3_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Oct 2010
Posts: 1,775
Default Superb Brussel Sprouts

michael wrote in
:

I have been growing brussel sprouts on my allotment for more than 40
years,and indeed for the last 20 years on the same spot.I went to a
talk by a secretary of the national vegetable growers society some
years ago and he said that he had grown brussels in the same spot for
yesrs.He said that the important things are (i) pot on the seedlings
finally into at least a 5" pot so as to get a good rootball (ii) lime
the soil heavily in January (iii) put a trowelful of lime into the
planting hole and plant by end of May (iv)firm in the plants all round
with your heel (v) water in well
(vi) put some collars round the stem
(vii)put a little Derris around the stem.

Then water until established and then feed with chicken manure pellets
or fish,blood and bone just once and earth up around the stems.

Well,I have been following this procedure for many years,and it has
been reasonably successful.However,every year and independent of the
weather,I always have about 20% of the plants which do not fully grow
or succumb to cabbage root fly-very few get club root.In particular I
have found it difficult to get reliable results from the cultivar
Wellington F1,which in my view produces sprouts with superb nutty
flavour.My brussel sprouts have generally been the envy of fellow
plotholders who get poor plants for one reason or another.

This year I have tried one more thing on about 30 Wellington F1
plants.At the time of planting and after carrying out the above
procedure,I have placed an upturned 8" pot with the bottom cut off
(rather like a smaller version of the type of ring used to plant
greenhouse tomatoes,but empty in this case). The theory behind it is
to stop wind rock on young brussel seedlings,and so minimising the
chance of a hole developing for cabbage root fly to get in and lay its
eggs-also it provides a slightly warmer environments for the seedlings
to get established,although the former is in my view the most
important.

Well the results have been almost unbelievable.Every,and I mean
every,plant is thriving and they are all of almost the same height.The
plants are now 3-4 feet tall,and the rings seem to provide some
support- I usually stake them by now. Tiny sprouts are beginning to
form and I am hopeful of a magnificent crop. Some say it might be the
season,but many of our ploholders are having the traditional problems
as usual.So I am pretty convinced that the open rings-which is the
only different thing I have done-are the reason for these very healthy
plants.

Michael


Thankyou, Michael.
I wonder if you would give me a few details on how you deal with
whitefly. Do you have whitefly? I do and it devestates all of mine.

Baz