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Upon arrival at the beach farm this morning, I had to make a decision. Should I pull the broccoli to make room for greens? The plants were putting out some seriously nice looking side shoots -like the one above, where new, larger florets would grow.
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Since the floral
meristem (what we call broccoli) had been cut off a few weeks back, the downward flow of the hormone auxin has ceased to limit the growth of side shoots. The prostrate stem above, then, is able to put out a series of new leading stems, all of which would produce broccoli florets.
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But there are other problems. King Cabbageworm is back.
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And Lord Whitefly remains.
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So I pulled the whole lot of them.
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Happily discovering that journeyman earthworms have come to work for us.
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What remains is the one broccoli plant that has not had its leader cut. With no nylon on hand, I used window screening to keep out the cabbage moths -it's a little silly looking. In fact, the plan was to protect the whole patch with a fabric cover, but when we arrived on Sept. 5th, the broccoli was ready to pick and completely without cabbage worms -this despite worms being present just two weeks earlier.
Which leads me to this:
Can I plant broccoli next year in a way that takes advantage of the hole created by the life cycle of the cabbage moth? The worm-eaten leaves have little affect on the growth of the plant -we simply don't want them and their turds in our broccoli florets. What if the cabbage moths breed on a rather regular schedule? Can I plant broccoli so that its florets develop completely in the 3 or 4 weeks without cabbage worms? After all, that appears to be what we chanced upon this year. From late August to mid-late September there were no cabbage worms on the broccoli. Last week, none. This week, some. If this hole can be exploited, I can grow broccoli without much concern for the green buggers. Now, weather, location, and other factors surely come into play. But I like the idea, I like outsmarting the critters -isn't that what our big brains are good for anyhow?
I had a really frustrating time with growing broccoli in our garden. Out of 6 plants, only 1 actually grew a broccoli crown. Have you ever had plants that didn't produce a broccoli crown at all? It totally stumped me.
ReplyDeleteYes, I have.
ReplyDelete5-10-5 fertilizer, all day sun should be enough to get it to grow. That's all I did.
I threw the fertilizer down when I planted the starts, which were probably 40-60 days old when I planted them.
Thanks for the tip. Something I'll try next year. Today we are building raised beds so helpfully that with fertilizer will get the crowns to show. thanks!
ReplyDeleteBTW, I can never see myself straining out seeds for tomato sauce. Way to much work, taking off the skin is hard enough!