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Can You Pick Asparagus The First Year

By Della Monroe


New gardeners fight an uphill battle sometimes when attempting to learn about the plants they are putting in the ground. Each fruit and vegetable plant has unique needs and habits that they must learn about. If their parents did not teach them as children, then they do not even know to ask, can you pick asparagus the first year.

The fact is, you can, but not all season long. The spears do come back each year in most regions, so one needs to allow the roots and tubers to mature. If a harvest is done for only about two weeks, then the plants are allowed to complete their cycle of maturity, the next Spring will see an even better crop.

Plants like broccoli are the opposite. It is an early spring blooming plant that will continue to generate florets until July, depending on what zone one is in. However, it is a plant that must be harvested daily, for if it goes to seed and produces yellow flowers, then no more florets will be forthcoming.

In some climates the seeds do not die, but it is generally recommended that the gardener try to harvest the seeds when they mature. This is only possible if they know for certain that they planted an heirloom variety of broccoli. Hybrids and GMO plants generally have seeds that are sterile and, while they might grow a plant the next year, that plant will generally not produce any fruit.

A really cute idea for new gardeners is to make a chicken run around the vegetable beds so that the chickens can take care of pests that might want to eat their harvest before they do. By creating an enclosure for the birds, the chickens get to run about and enjoy themselves, but they stay safe within the wire. This is an excellent approach to true organic gardening.

It gives a different concept to the notion of free-roaming chickens, but it is a brilliant idea and allows the fowl to roam about and enjoy life while still keeping them safe. Before setting up a chicken house, however, make sure there are not ordinances against it in your area. If there are, and you have a private yard, just make sure all your chickens are female so there is no crowing rooster to give you away.

People have different reasons for beginning their survival gardens, and all the reasons are equally valid. It is a heart-warming experience for children to garden, and it teaches them respect about the work that goes into generating the foods we eat. With the presence of GMO foods in the grocery stores, most of them untested for safety, many people are gardening to keep their families healthy.

Another really good reason for survival gardening is so that the foods one eats are flavorful and vine-ripened. When fruits and vegetables are picked green and allowed to ripen in transit, they lack many of the nutrients, and they totally lack flavor. Young people these days do not even know what a tomato or a peach is supposed to taste like unless they have parents who garden.




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