ItsAboutThyme_logo[1] by you.         It's About Thyme                   
             tel:  512-280-1192                                                    Jan 21,  2011
 
        Nursery Notes: We have asparagus crowns for $1.25;  potatoes
        (Yukon golds, and kennebec); celebrity tomatoes for the early birds.
        Saffron crocus on sale for $3.29 (regular price $5.00). All the herbs 
        are looking fantastic, and we're going to have a huge selection of 
       wonderful plants when spring arrives!    
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     Ikebana, the Japanese spiritual art of flower arranging, is featured on 
      KLRU-TV's Central Texas Gardener this weekend, along with tree 
     pruning, and an expert's view on ball moss and oak tree sprouts. 
      Saturday, noon and 4 p.m. Sunday 9 a.m.  www.klru.org/ctg/
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       Tree Talk Winter Walk at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildlower Center 
       tomorrow (Saturday) from 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. Free admission. Tips on
       design, tree care and oak wilt control.  http://www.wildflower.org/ttww/
 
                                                 http://www.flickr.com/photos/matupplevelser/
                             How to Grow Asparagus
                                by Chris Winslow
 
One of the first garden chores for late January and early February, or
just as soon as the ground can be tilled, is to set up an asparagus bed.
 
This extremely tasty vegetable requires a sunny location with good
drainage. Since it is a perennial, I always suggest that people think of
asparagus officinalis as a border plant that you can put on the edge of
a garden, or along a fence line.

Grown from seed, asparagus can take a number of years before it
reaches maturity and a harvestable size. To shorten this time, it’s
common for gardeners to plant ‘crowns’ that are two or three years
old. People new to this crop often ask me how many they should plant.
Under optimum conditions a 20-foot row (or the 100 square feet of a
10’ x 10’ raised bed) will yield about 10 pounds each spring. Twenty
crowns is just about right for a family of four.
 
To create your asparagus patch, till liberal amounts of compost into the
ground. Add blood and bone meal, and some slow-release organic
fertilizer (5-12-15) at the rate of 10 to 12 lbs per 100 square feet or 20
foot row. The 12% phosphate will encourage strong root growth.

Rows should be 4 feet apart. Plant your asparagus crowns in furrows 6“
to 12” deep and 12” apart. Cover the crowns with 3 to 4 inches of soil.
Later in the season, add more soil to fill the furrow to level. This will
 help with weed control.

Allow the plants to grow for a year without harvesting. Spears that
emerge the following spring can be harvested when they reach a height
 of 6 to 8 inches. Continue to harvest new spears until the diameter gets
 smaller than 3/8 inch or about pencil size.
 
The bed should then be allowed to rest, and to re-grow new top growth.
This is the time to feed the plants with an organic fertilizer high in
nitrogen. Cottonseed meal (6-2-2) or feather meal (12-0-0) both work well.
 
After the harvest, cover the asparagus bed with at least 3 inches of
compost mixed with mulch, and keep the bed watered well throughout
the heat of summer. Care through the hot months will insure a bountiful
harvest the following spring. 

Happy Gardening Everyone!
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  ItsAboutThyme_logo[1] by you.  Visit the website at  www.itsaboutthyme.com  Visit the
nursery at 11726 Manchaca Road, Austin 78748 facebookthyme 
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