Have you ever wished you could grow sweet, fresh pineapples like
those great Del Monte ones you can sometimes find in the stores? How
about bananas or other tropical delights - wouldn't it be fun to grow
your own, right in your back yard?
There
are certainly some limitations, but not as severe as most people think.
Let me give you a few ideas to get your imagination going:
Traditionally,
pineapple is grown from cuttings from old growth. The crown or growing
tip is left in the field until it dries out, then it's harvested and
stuck in newly prepared soil to grow again. This method requires 18-24
months to produce new fruit from the old material.
How about
trying a different approach, which you can do with the pineapple you buy
at your local store? Just break off the top and prepare it for
immediate planting in your greenhouse or other warm space with ample
sunlight. Here's how:
With your fingers, take off the green fronds
nearest the broken end for about one inch (2 1/2 cm), leaving the stalk
exposed. Place in a 4" pot or tray of pre-moistened sawdust/sand
mixture that has been prepared for planting seedlings, with Pre-Plant
and Weekly Feed mixes included at 1 1/2 ounces and 3/4 ounces per 1/2
cubic foot of soil.
Water regularly to maintain soil moisture with
clean water until roots appear, then use the constant feed solution of 1
ounce Weekly Feed for 3 gallons of water for every watering until
plants are placed in the garden - about 4-8 weeks, depending on your
growing conditions inside and in your garden. You should have a strong,
healthy root structure by the time they are planted into the garden.
Transplant
into the garden only after all danger of frost is past and the soil is
warm. Apply Pre-Plant and Weekly Feed to the soil before transplanting
into the garden. Feed weekly with Weekly Feed until 8 weeks before
harvest.
If nights get cold before the plants reach maturity,
cover them with greenhouse plastic using the "mini-greenhouse" frames
shown in the Mittleider gardening books and the Photo section of the
MittleiderMethodGardening group on Yahoo Groups. Apply heat as needed to
avoid any possibility of frost, and keep the plants from going dormant.
This
simple process changes the time needed to grow mature pineapples from
18+ months to 8 months! Sweet potatoes' growing times can be reduced
from 10 1/2 months to 6 months or less, and other crops see similar
improvement.
With those numbers, I hope some of you - especially
in the warmer climates - will have the courage to try your hand at
propagating plants. It can be both fun and rewarding.
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