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WCD 25-07-2003 07:02 PM

Moving asparagus
 

I'm starting work on a kitchen garden for my new place in Maine. There
is a pretty good lot of asparagus already growing there, but it isn't in
a place where I want it to be.

Is it safe to transplant it to where I want it, or should I just find a
way to live with it as it is? I can afford to wait a few years for it to
recover if need be.

Thanks.



simy1 26-07-2003 12:02 AM

Moving asparagus
 
WCD wrote in message ...
I'm starting work on a kitchen garden for my new place in Maine. There
is a pretty good lot of asparagus already growing there, but it isn't in
a place where I want it to be.

Is it safe to transplant it to where I want it, or should I just find a
way to live with it as it is? I can afford to wait a few years for it to
recover if need be.

Thanks.


Pros:

1) asparagus will transplant well in the fall after first frost

Cons:

1) lots and lots of work to dig up those rhizomes
2) lots and lots of work to make a new bed
3) asparagus in full sun interplants well with a number of vegetables,
so if you thought of putting vegetables there, at least lettuce or
chard will grow in between your asparagus
4) It will take a while to clear the bed of remnant asparagus crowns

Christopher Norton 28-07-2003 03:06 PM

Moving asparagus
 
The message
from WCD contains these words:


I'm starting work on a kitchen garden for my new place in Maine. There
is a pretty good lot of asparagus already growing there, but it isn't in
a place where I want it to be.


Is it safe to transplant it to where I want it, or should I just find a
way to live with it as it is? I can afford to wait a few years for it to
recover if need be.


Thanks.



Not knowing what winters are like over there (pretty damn cold I`d
imagine) but here`s how i`d do it here in the uk.

Get to about end feb before everything starts to get going with them.
Lift the crown giving plenty of room around it as the roots if it`s
established will have spread a lot. Dig a trench about 12 inches deep
and then mound up the middle to about 10 inches. Plant the crown on top
of that. Cover with some soil to about 6 inches. Leave untill you get
some shoots off it. Mound the rest up as time progresses and the size of
the shoots gets better. I would treat them as first year crowns and do
not take anything off them for a couple of years. Let them get over the
move.

Hope for the best should be ok.

--
email farmer chris on
Please don`t use
as it`s a spam haven.


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