Asparagus

single asparagus spear ready for harvest
single asparagus spear ready for harvest

Introduction

Asparagus is seen as a luxury vegetable, with tender spears shooting through the soil in spring and early summer. The nutritious spears are delicious fried with garlic or as an ingredient in soup. Unusually for a vegetable, asparagus is a perennial plant, that once established can provide a harvest for 15 years or more.

My experience is that asparagus is not the easiest crop to grow. The crowns need two years to become established, with only light picking recommended in this period. Once a bed is mature, weeding remains as the biggest challenge. Asparagus plants grow tall but provide little leaf cover to the soil, giving the opportunity for weeds to germinate at their base.

Planting

Asparagus is planted as 1 year old crowns, spaced 30 centimetres apart with 45 centimetres between rows.

Harvesting

The crowns need two years to become established, with only light picking recommended in this period.

Sow
(inside)
Sow
(outside)
Harvest
(fresh)
Harvest
(stored)
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
= jar, = freeze, = store

Varieties

Asparagus varieties differ in harvest time, with some varieties ready for picking in early April, and others available in June and early July. There are also differences in colour, from the widely seen green spears, to the less common purple varieties.

For the longest harvest period, selecting a range of asparagus types is required, as the cropping period for a single type is relatively short at 4 to 8 weeks.

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Growing

Asparagus crowns thrive in nutritious, but light, sandy soils. In heavy soils, asparagus is better grown in raised beds using fresh compost. All male varieties are preferred as they devote all their energy to growing spears rather than producing seed.

Asparagus is planted in the spring by digging a trench approximately one spade head deep and thirty centimetres or one foot wide. Down the middle of the trench the soil should be ridged, or elevated, so that when planted the crowns are placed at the top of the ridge with the roots running downwards along the sides. The trench is filled with soil so that only the tips of the crowns are exposed (5 centimetres or two inches).

The crowns need two years to become established, with only light picking recommended in this period. During this time, an asparagus bed needs to be kept weed free, a task done by hand to avoid disturbing the roots below the surface. Once a bed is mature, weeding remains as the biggest challenge. Asparagus plants grow tall but provide little leaf cover to the soil, giving the opportunity for weeds to germinate at their base. There is no shortage of wild seed flying across an allotment, and the result is that a gardener needs to be constantly clearing away weeds when young, to avoid disturbing the soil and risk damaging the roots of the asparagus crowns.

Towards the end of the harvest, a few asparagus spears should be allowed to mature, to give the plants energy for the following year’s harvest.

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