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Friday, 26 August 2016

Moving the PSB to the next stage

My Purple Sprouting Broccoli plants are getting quite big now, and beginning to be top-heavy. In the gale-force wind we had last weekend they were swaying to and fro like crazy, so I decided they needed to be staked before they came to any harm. I also decided that since my "Winterbor" Kale was not going to get used, it might as well go, so I have pulled up the plants and disposed of them. The PSB will be glad of this because it will allow them to get more light.



I have given each PSB plant a sturdy 4-foot hardwood stake, which I hammered well into the soil with a heavy hammer to make sure they are secure. I tied the plants very loosely to the stakes, using several turns of soft string. The idea is to provide stability in strong winds without restricting the plants' growth.




Since I had the netting rolled back to facilitate the putting-in of the stakes, I took the opportunity to weed the bed and to give the PSB a dose of general-purpose plant food (liquid Growmore in this case).




As soon as I had finished the job the netting went back on, because there are still quite a few white butterflies around - though all the other varieties are conspicuous by their absence. I noticed a few Whitefly lurking under the leaves of the PSB, so sometime soon I will need to spray them with washing-up liquid like I did with the Brussels Sprouts the other day.


In my photos you can see the Leeks along the edges of the PSB bed. I don't know whether they will be any good - they may perhaps be too shaded - but it's always worth a try, to maximise the yield from a small space. The ones between the rows of Parsnips have been completely swamped, and I don't expect them to be worth having.




Incidentally, I didn't need to use any of the spare PSB plants that I raised. Most of them were eventually given away to a friend and the last remaining one went in the compost bin last Sunday. My "insurance" paid off.

4 comments:

  1. That's so funny you should mention the lack of butterflies - I was just thinking the other day how I am constantly seeing cabbage whites, but I've seen very few of any other type this year. Too bad it's not the other way around.

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  2. This year we are using enviromesh to protect brassicas from whitefly. Soon everything will need to be grown under cover.

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  3. I'm interested in your cage system Mark; can I ask where did the rods come from? I'll need a system like this at the allotment. My PSB is relatively safe here in the veg patch garden as a neighbour grows copious amounts of walking stick cabbages so the pests go there and tend to leave my stuff alone!

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    1. Caro, the rods and connectors come from a firm called Gardening Naturally. I am a great fan of them because you can buy them in lots of different lengths, and you can buy them individually if you want - and the price is fair too. More info here -- http://www.gardening-naturally.com/acatalog/Garden_Hoops_and_Cages.html

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