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Rural/Farm Life

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bvar22

(39,909 posts)
Fri Mar 30, 2012, 07:28 PM Mar 2012

It just seems so WRONG..... Harvesting Asparagus. [View all]

The first edible that pops up out of the ground on our place announcing the advent of SPRING is Asparagus!

"HI!! I Bring Good News! Its SPRING!! Winter is OVER!!! "

...and the first thing we do this this early Bringer of the Good News is cut it off at the ground.
(ans steam it, and eat it with moans of delight)
It just seems SO wrong.

Everything else in our Garden, upon showing signs of life after the dark of Winter is nurtured,
cared for with tenderness, fertilized, weeded, and visited daily with loving appreciation.
Days, sometimes weeks will pass in agonized anticipation of a Tomato or a Strawberry reaching that perfect ripeness before it is harvested...

...but NOT Asparagus.
As soon as it pops UP, Off With Its Head!

(The thin ones are seedlings from last year's seeds that dropped in the bed.
The thicker ones should have been cut yesterday.
The shorter brown stubs are the stalks from last year's standing crop that were cut off last Fall.)

If immediate decapitation is not bad enough,
it can get even more brutal.

Hey. Lets cover up the babies so they can't get any light!!!




Light Deprivation produces White Asparagus
that is even more tender.



YUM!
We love this stuff so much that we added another variety, and two more beds this year.



Asparagus is one of the very few Perennial vegetables.
A well maintained bed will produce for many years.
Our original bed is 4 years old, and producing beyond our expectations.
It has been trouble free, with no pests, diseases, or any special needs.
(There is an Asparagus Beetle, but we haven't seen one here yet.)

After harvesting (4 - 6 weeks in a mature bed),
the stalks are left standing for the rest of the Summer,
and cut off at ground level when they turn brown in the Fall.
Asparagus Beds are self-weeding for the most part because the plants grow so tall & thick that weeds don't really have a chance. After the Spring Harvest, we just give it a little water if we don't get any rain, and just watch it grow.



This is a beautiful plant, very lacy and ethereal.
It grows very tall, over 6', so I suggest locating it along the fence.

Asparagus has been the most trouble free/ low maintenance crop we have grown here,
and the taste and tenderness of fresh cut Asparagus is better than anything that can be bought in a market,
or ordered in a high end restaurant.

We prefer our lightly steamed with a little butter.







In 2006, My Wife & I sold everything,
left the Big Northern City (Minneapolis),
and moved to The Woods of West/Central Arkansas (Ouachita Mountains).
We are committed to living as independently and as sustainability as possible.
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=268x2601


For anyone following the saga of Blossom, the rescue fawn,
she is now 9 months old, and completely free to go where she chooses.

She still returns home every evening for apple treats, back scratching, and a walk in The Woods with her Deer Mama
and our two Mousers.

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=268x5178

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oh the joy handmade34 Mar 2012 #1
Missy the cat loved aspargus CountAllVotes Mar 2012 #2
Uh-Oh. bvar22 Apr 2012 #23
Kick & Recommend! yellerpup Mar 2012 #3
Not to mention the effect asparagus has on the smell of one's.... NYC_SKP Mar 2012 #4
Asparagus and mushroom risotto PuraVidaDreamin Mar 2012 #5
When I was a small child FlaGranny Mar 2012 #6
Yummy and not castable! lonestarnot Mar 2012 #7
The deer is a beautiful animal . . . nt mistertrickster Mar 2012 #8
Your garden ROCKS, bvar22. OnyxCollie Mar 2012 #9
We started with SqFt, bvar22 Apr 2012 #24
Refreshing, beautiful post. Plant some garlic. joanbarnes Mar 2012 #10
Marvelous pics, I can taste the asparagus now..yummers. dixiegrrrrl Mar 2012 #11
I have heard the first year you do not get any edible ones, is that true? Alameda Mar 2012 #12
Sadly, that is true. bvar22 Apr 2012 #18
I bet you can pickle it. kestrel91316 Apr 2012 #25
You're making me hungry. Bette Noir Mar 2012 #13
How cool! nt. limpyhobbler Mar 2012 #14
Yay, Arkansas! chervilant Apr 2012 #15
Arkansas in the Spring is breath taking. bvar22 Apr 2012 #19
Yum. Beautiful place. Great garden! I wanna live where YOU live! Except I expect... Honeycombe8 Apr 2012 #16
Thanks. bvar22 Apr 2012 #20
Oh, my, that sounds like a dream come true to me. Honeycombe8 Apr 2012 #22
I'm planning on putting in some this year....... Historic NY Apr 2012 #17
Asparagus has proved to be surprisingly hardy and strongly self propagating. bvar22 Apr 2012 #21
I love fresh asparagus so much LWolf Jul 2012 #26
How is Blossom doing these days? (November, 2012) Flaxbee Nov 2012 #27
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