But this year, despite promising I was going to make things easy for myself, I have tentatively grown a few broccoli seedlings, and splashed out on a real proper brassica cage to try to protect them. And here it is, newly installed and filled with plants:
It looks a bit of a monstrosity really, and I hate having to do this sort of thing, but if I can finally try some purple sprouting broccoli next spring it will be worth it.There are two purple sprouting broccoli plants, two white sprouting broccoli, and six summer-maturing broccoli, which I'm sure must really be calabrese. They are still quite small, as they were sown as an afterthought, but fingers crossed...
When we put the cage up I had to move a few onions which were planted too close to the edge of their bed (i.e. in the brassica bed), and in doing so discovered this:
More white rot? The first year here I had none at all, but it just seems to spread and spread! Luckily it only seems to get the odd plant here and there, but I always fear it will get worse...
2 comments:
I have a comparable situation with white rot, but so far rotating strictly - I never grow alliums on the same side of the plot two years running - has been enough to keep ahead of it. Have you tried Armatillox? It's supposed to be the one thing that's effective.
No I haven't, but just read up on it, and it sounds very interesting! A cure-all wonder drug for the allotment. Sounds too good to be true... Maybe next year I'll find out!
Post a Comment