Asparagus and Memories of My Childhood

OldGuy43

Garden Ornament
Joined
Nov 15, 2011
Messages
693
Reaction score
14
Points
90
Location
Travis County, Texas Zone 8b
During WWII (The big one. You heard of it. It was in all the papers. :D ) my family, like many others had a Victory Garden in the backyard. Years later the garden was gone, but the asparagus kept coming up. As a matter of fact, despite best efforts it threatened to take over the yard.

My idea is to plant asparagus in the back end of my property where the weeds reign supreme. Asparagus has to be better than weeds.

Comments?

punctuation and capitalization corrections only
 

Smiles Jr.

Garden Addicted
Joined
Jan 18, 2010
Messages
1,330
Reaction score
575
Points
267
Location
PlayStation Farm, Rural Indiana
A few years after I got home from the military (1971) I started a 4 ft. x 8 ft. asparagus patch and it did very well. I planted the sprouts about 20" deep in well amended soil as I was instructed and that patch was a big producer for about 16 years. We moved to the country and I have not been successful growing asparagus since. We love the tender shoots each spring but we have had to buy our asparagus for many of the last 24 years. I've tried to establish asparagus beds several times but they only last a couple years then die off.

Oh yeah, asparagus is much better than weeds any day.
 

wsmoak

Deeply Rooted
Joined
May 14, 2010
Messages
547
Reaction score
23
Points
151
Location
A little north of Columbus, GA
This reminds me that it's almost time to start my asparagus seeds! I'm hoping to get them going in the spring and hopefully figure out how to keep them alive. -Wendy
 

lesa

Garden Master
Joined
Nov 10, 2008
Messages
6,645
Reaction score
570
Points
337
Location
ZONE 4 UPSTATE NY
I highly recommend that anyone who enjoys asparagus- should plant some! For so many years, I thought, "gee I would like to start a bed, but it takes so long to mature." Obviously, had I planted the asparagus the first time I thought that- I would have been eating a lot of asparagus! My bed is about 4-5 years old now, and it is wonderful. The tender stems are ready before anything else in the garden. A real pleasure in the early spring. I don't think they will compete with your weeds, oldguy- but if you make a deep, well amended bed, you won't be sorry. Enjoy!
 

cityfarmer

Attractive To Bees
Joined
Jun 26, 2011
Messages
328
Reaction score
8
Points
72
Location
Colorado Front Range Zone 4/5
We harvested our first meal of asparagus last spring when our asparagus patch was 3 years old. We only had a enough for one meal, but it was delicious! I can't wait until this spring.
 

lesa

Garden Master
Joined
Nov 10, 2008
Messages
6,645
Reaction score
570
Points
337
Location
ZONE 4 UPSTATE NY
I haven't heard of sprouting it first. I have only planted the crowns. They really look like dried up roots. Deep is the key.
 

Southern Gardener

Deeply Rooted
Joined
Nov 22, 2007
Messages
1,558
Reaction score
8
Points
142
Location
NW Louisiana Zone 8a
lesa said:
I highly recommend that anyone who enjoys asparagus- should plant some! For so many years, I thought, "gee I would like to start a bed, but it takes so long to mature." Obviously, had I planted the asparagus the first time I thought that- I would have been eating a lot of asparagus! My bed is about 4-5 years old now, and it is wonderful. The tender stems are ready before anything else in the garden. A real pleasure in the early spring. I don't think they will compete with your weeds, oldguy- but if you make a deep, well amended bed, you won't be sorry. Enjoy!
I agree Lesa! This spring will be my second year in the garden. I'm hoping I can harvest some - the plants did very well over the summer months. I always thought I couldn't grow asparagus.
 

digitS'

Garden Master
Joined
Dec 13, 2007
Messages
26,640
Reaction score
32,148
Points
457
Location
border, ID/WA(!)
Nothing much to say about the growing of asparagus; I've never had it in the garden.

Asparagus grows on its own along some of our rivers. For a number of years, I had a garden right above the Spokane river. The garden was so close that I could have cast a line from the edge of the garden, into the river during the spring run-off.

When the water dropped, the asparagus would grow. As I said, I would harvest it but that only lasted until I learned of the heavy metal contamination of the river banks from the old mines, upstream. The lead and such was so bad that the State Park Department brought sand and rock in by the truckload and spread it in places frequented by folks down there to swim. Lots of little kids now play in trucked in sand rather than what was deposited by the river. My wild asparagus harvesting has ended.

Victory gardens? My grandparents returned to Canada during WWII. Grandma planted her victory garden along the banks of the Fraser River. Grandpa died in 1953 and G'ma moved back to the states and lived there for a couple more years.

I visited the old place 15 years after they left. No one had lived there during all that time but her victory garden was still there. It may be there, yet. G'ma loved her flowers and planted them in a large "V" :).

Steve
 

NwMtGardener

Garden Addicted
Joined
May 30, 2011
Messages
1,839
Reaction score
874
Points
227
Location
Whitefish, MT
Oldguy, if i remember right, you are in a fairly dry area? I, like steve, have seen asparagus growing wild in wet areas, ditches and creekbanks, so i'm thinking you'll want to be sure and keep it well watered. You'll have to be even more patient if you're starting from seed, even when planting crowns as lesa mentioned, you want to wait a few years before harvesting, so i'm wondering if you'll want to wait a few extra years if you're starting from seed? BTW, i went both ways - got some crowns a few years ago, but also started a new bed from seed in 2011. I definitely feel like asparagus is well worth the effort though!!
 

Latest posts

Top