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Growing a Rosemary bush
On Thu, 18 Mar 2010 dido22 wrote:
I have grown Rosemary in a large pot for many years during the summer months, and have always thrown it away late Autumn, then bought a new plant next spring. I've just bought a new plant ( 'upright Rosemary' ) and I read on its label that it can be grown into a bush up to 2 metres high !! Has anyone grown a Rosemary bush before?, does it survive the winter?, does it smell & taste as good as a new plant does ? Of course it does. I've had a rosemary bush in my garden for over twenty years. The weight of the snow back in January caused it to bend over but it recovered, is still going strong and is flowering at the moment. Cut a couple of sprigs yesterday to cook with some lamb shanks. David -- David Rance writing from Caversham, Reading, UK http://rance.org.uk |
#2
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Growing a Rosemary bush
In article ,
David Rance wrote: On Thu, 18 Mar 2010 dido22 wrote: Has anyone grown a Rosemary bush before?, does it survive the winter?, does it smell & taste as good as a new plant does ? Of course it does. I've had a rosemary bush in my garden for over twenty years. The weight of the snow back in January caused it to bend over but it recovered, is still going strong and is flowering at the moment. Cut a couple of sprigs yesterday to cook with some lamb shanks. A warning: many people find that rosemary is short-lived in the UK, because it suffers from fungal root-rot. The trick is to layer it after a few years, and carry on with the new plants if the main one dies. All you have to do for the normal straggling forms is to tuck a couple of stems just under the soil and put half a brick or a comparable stone on them. DON'T cut them off, and just forget them for a couple of years. You can then cut the stem between the layer and the main plant, and dig the layer up to put somewhere else. Or not, as you prefer - it can be left in place. That's the easiest form of propagation known to gardeners, and works with many straggling shrubs. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
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Growing a Rosemary bush
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#4
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Growing a Rosemary bush
On 03/19/2010 09:09 AM, Sacha wrote:
On 2010-03-19 00:11:15 +0000, Emery Davis said: On 03/18/2010 06:31 PM, wrote: A warning: many people find that rosemary is short-lived in the UK, because it suffers from fungal root-rot. The trick is to layer it Yes, I find this even in a well drained (all is relative!) spot. I'm afraid our 2 large -- maybe 1.5 meter -- bushes are all failing after this winter. Project this weekend to perform major surgery. -E Do you think it's snow melt that's causing this problem? I ask because I know of a few people who've had that problem with other plants in the past. They're in free-draining spots but there's just too much moisture to get rid of. Hi Sacha, I really don't know what causes it. But I've tried some _really_ dry places. Currently they're against a south facing wall, quite near the base, in a slightly raised bed. For sure they don't like great amounts of snow, but I wonder if they weren't weakened the previous winter. For the OP's sake, though, these have survived at -22C (well probably a little above that because of the wall). Though as we all know there's a lot of difference between surviving and thriving! The great advantage when the rosemary gets really big is you can use huge amounts with impunity. We very often grill over a wood fire in the big kitchen fireplace; adding some rosemary branches at the end will cause the coals to flame up and smoke like crazy, which gives a wonderful smoked-rosemary flavour to meat. -E |
#5
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Growing a Rosemary bush
On 03/19/2010 05:38 PM, Sacha wrote:
For the OP's sake, though, these have survived at -22C (well probably a little above that because of the wall). Though as we all know there's a lot of difference between surviving and thriving! And some do better than others. The one we know as the Salcombe rosemary here - the very, very, very long one that trails on for ever, is as tender as can be, as is R. Severn Seas. But R. Marenca has come happily through the winter here in one wall and died off in another 3 feet away, in the same type of soil and height etc. I can only assume that the dead one was not a good plant or that there's some little pocket of water that collects underneath it. Anyway, it's now an ex-rosemary. Ah, many of us here remember the famous Salcombe rosemary. And the accompanying "discussions" For sure there are a lot of varieties that perform differently, though. I lived in San Francisco for a few years, not too far from Ocean Beach, there were many rampant rosemaries, not used in the kitchen and I'm sure not hardy here, but still wonderful smelling when bruised. The great advantage when the rosemary gets really big is you can use huge amounts with impunity. We very often grill over a wood fire in the big kitchen fireplace; adding some rosemary branches at the end will cause the coals to flame up and smoke like crazy, which gives a wonderful smoked-rosemary flavour to meat. [] I've had meat cooked over vine prunings to the same effect - delicious! I recall friends of mine in France (Haut Beaujolais) had an Albizia julibrissin which thrived in their garden for years but one year the snowfall was particularly heavy and by the time it had all melted, the tree was dead as a doornail. I've had trouble with that one. I planted it in what I hoped was a very drained hillock, but it died back more and more over several years and I finally took it out. Haven't tried again as it was quite dear. These do very well on the coast in sandy soil though, don't seem to mind the salt. I put a Davidia involucrata a few feet over, it's hanging in although it didn't appreciate the snow, either. -E |
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