- Thread starter
- #1,351
digitS'
Garden Master
The Baker Creek Petrowski description includes the statement that "around 1915 this variety was very important in Alaskan agriculture."
It wasn't quite a hundred years ago but I'd read that turnips do well in new gardens. I don't know why that would be but my garden on the California coast had mostly grown wild blackberry bushes. After I got those cleared, it grew turnips just great. Fortunately, it grew green beans well also, something I actually liked.
The garden in Idaho started out as a field of pine stumps. After the tractor got that ground cleared, about the only thing that grew well the first year was turnips. Good thing I wasn't easily discouraged because other crops did well, later.
Both times, I don't remember trying the greens. DW wasn't around then but 100 years later , she claims that they are mustard greens. No, they aren't. Turnips and mustard are different species. That thought may be what keeps me from thinking that they taste the same ... I'm okay with that. We do have mustard but certainly not in August and September. I'm putting turnips in my "summer greens" column but with so much fleabeetle damage and so many years since I grew them last, I have no idea how they should have grown.
Do turnips usually grow nicely in the summertime?? I wonder if they do well on new ground because the fleabeetles don't find them, at first.
Steve
It wasn't quite a hundred years ago but I'd read that turnips do well in new gardens. I don't know why that would be but my garden on the California coast had mostly grown wild blackberry bushes. After I got those cleared, it grew turnips just great. Fortunately, it grew green beans well also, something I actually liked.
The garden in Idaho started out as a field of pine stumps. After the tractor got that ground cleared, about the only thing that grew well the first year was turnips. Good thing I wasn't easily discouraged because other crops did well, later.
Both times, I don't remember trying the greens. DW wasn't around then but 100 years later , she claims that they are mustard greens. No, they aren't. Turnips and mustard are different species. That thought may be what keeps me from thinking that they taste the same ... I'm okay with that. We do have mustard but certainly not in August and September. I'm putting turnips in my "summer greens" column but with so much fleabeetle damage and so many years since I grew them last, I have no idea how they should have grown.
Do turnips usually grow nicely in the summertime?? I wonder if they do well on new ground because the fleabeetles don't find them, at first.
Steve