- Thread starter
- #11
digitS'
Garden Master
That should work too, Wife'!
I haven't saved seed and I bet it takes longer than I'd expect for them to mature. I save a radish variety and the darn things take a full season to properly mature. Well . . . since yours is already flowering -- I suspect Colorado Springs has a longer growing season than here. Heavy frost dang near killed the bok choy I set outside ! It may decide to bolt to seed rather than grow . . .
Anyway, I've never been able to find a variety as good as Mei Qing Choi, which is a hybrid. That may change this year! The taller bok choy on the left is LuLan Choy. It is still a dwarf and it's real good.
Apparently, LuLan is open-pollinated or, at least, not identified as a hybrid. (Could get myself into trouble here . . :/) New Dimension Seed Company in Oregon sells it.
I don't care about the standard size bok choy. It seems really close to its relative cabbage to encourage me to grow much of it. . . . I grow cabbage, too . (See, Green Man above.)
Steve
I haven't saved seed and I bet it takes longer than I'd expect for them to mature. I save a radish variety and the darn things take a full season to properly mature. Well . . . since yours is already flowering -- I suspect Colorado Springs has a longer growing season than here. Heavy frost dang near killed the bok choy I set outside ! It may decide to bolt to seed rather than grow . . .
Anyway, I've never been able to find a variety as good as Mei Qing Choi, which is a hybrid. That may change this year! The taller bok choy on the left is LuLan Choy. It is still a dwarf and it's real good.
Apparently, LuLan is open-pollinated or, at least, not identified as a hybrid. (Could get myself into trouble here . . :/) New Dimension Seed Company in Oregon sells it.
I don't care about the standard size bok choy. It seems really close to its relative cabbage to encourage me to grow much of it. . . . I grow cabbage, too . (See, Green Man above.)
Steve