Allotment Gardening Advice Help Chat

Growing => Grow Your Own => Topic started by: monsta on February 08, 2010, 17:29

Title: Celery
Post by: monsta on February 08, 2010, 17:29
whats the best type of celery? self blanching or normal? and is it hard to grow?
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: whippersnapper on February 08, 2010, 18:32
I won't be growing it again.

I found it very hard to germinate and then never really matured.

Tricky stuff.
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: DavidT on February 08, 2010, 18:35
I`ve only grown it once, never again. When I harvested it I developed huge water blisters on my hands and arms. :lol: :lol: :lol:
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: Shadrak on February 08, 2010, 19:05
From what lm told it take alot of attention to detail. It likes damp conditions with lots of organic matter. If you are going to give it go the self blanching varieties are the place to start the old fashioned trench types take to much work. Better still grow Celeriac..
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: monsta on February 08, 2010, 19:34
I`ve only grown it once, never again. When I harvested it I developed huge water blisters on my hands and arms. :lol: :lol: :lol:

was this because of the celery or hard work harvesting?

From what lm told it take alot of attention to detail. It likes damp conditions with lots of organic matter. If you are going to give it go the self blanching varieties are the place to start the old fashioned trench types take to much work. Better still grow Celeriac..

not keen on celeriac self blanching sounds like its possibly worth a try.  :)
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: DavidT on February 08, 2010, 20:20
Because of the celery. I didn`t know I was allergic to it. Glad I`ve never eaten it.lol
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: penance on February 08, 2010, 20:27
I grow Loretta, a self blanching variety.
Started off in root trainers with around 80% germination. Good crop grown infront on my runner bean row.

TBH, quite easy to grow so long as you pay attention to soil prep and watering.
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: yorky on February 08, 2010, 20:46
I've always found the self blanching very easy to grow. I germinate the seeds at about 65 degrees and then prick out into individual cells to grow on untill planting out time. Because they are a bog plant you need plenty of organic matter in the soil and you must water them just about every day.

The problem I found with the traditional blanched types is that the slugs loved to get under the blanching collar where it was impossible to get at them.
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: monsta on February 08, 2010, 20:55
so i dont just sprinkle the seeds in rows! do you need special equipment to germinate seeds or will the airing cupboard do?  :)
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: DD. on February 08, 2010, 21:06
You need special equipment such as this.

(http://i27.photobucket.com/albums/c182/G4IAR/DSCF0564a.jpg)

You may find the airing cupboard too hot for some seed and if you do take your eye off those that germinate.........
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: monsta on February 08, 2010, 21:11
You need special equipment such as this.

(http://i27.photobucket.com/albums/c182/G4IAR/DSCF0564a.jpg)

You may find the airing cupboard too hot for some seed and if you do take your eye off those that germinate.........

so a sealable bag and a windowsil or radiator?
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: DD. on February 08, 2010, 21:14
I just leave them in our bedroom, much to the disapproval of Mrs Digger. It's an even temperature in there and you can keep an eye on things as they need to come out of the bag as soon as they germinate.
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: monsta on February 08, 2010, 21:15
I just leave them in our bedroom, much to the disapproval of Mrs Digger. It's an even temperature in there and you can keep an eye on things as they need to come out of the bag as soon as they germinate.

great will try it! cheers DD!  :D
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: solway cropper on February 08, 2010, 21:50
I grew self-blanching in large tubs last year and it worked well although best picked when young. As the stalks grew more mature they also grew more stringy. Having said that a couple of minutes in the blender and they made a good basis for soup. Water is the key, it needs loads of water and loads of organic matter. If you can provide those it seems easy enough to grow.
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: kermit on February 08, 2010, 22:18
Celery was one of my few unqualified successes last year - and that was my 1st year!  Started off in peat pockets, pricked out to one per pocket, potted on as per normal, then out in my raised beds.  The soil had plenty chicken pellets added a few weeks before, and good quality top soil.  They were perfect - from reading this post maybe our wet weather up here helped them. 

As young plants, just pick stems off to eat raw.  WHilst they lasted and kept growing up to the first hard frosts, they did get a bit stringy so just used them for stocks, roasting with meat, etc.

So, easy for me, bu maybe just lucky.  Cant remember variety Im afraid, but didnt have any messing around to blanche them so must have been self-blanching.
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: zazen999 on February 08, 2010, 23:13
Easy way to grow celery?

In big pots, in half manure half compost; and keep the pots in a gravel tray full of water. Pop a drop of seaweed extract [maxicrop] in every few weeks. Then harvest as it grows, like cut and come again. Simples. If you have 2 or 3 pots, you can scalp one at a time and leave it to grow back whilst you scalp the others.
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: monsta on February 09, 2010, 10:35
good point with the summers we get celery should thrive in the typical english summmer  :lol:
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: thearaig on February 17, 2010, 19:32
I've grown celery for the last three years and It's been ok despite the fact that we have no heat. I put the seed in modules in trays and the trays in a translucent storage box. Near the fire in the evening and into sunlight when available.  They seem to be fairly hardy once theyve germinated.

Self blanching tend to be for summer use up to first frost.
Trench varieties can be used right through the winter.
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: thearaig on February 17, 2010, 20:07
Sorry. Forgot to say that they need light to germinate. Water the compost. Sow seed on topand water that with a mist spray.
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: shokkyy on February 17, 2010, 23:52
I did some self blanching celery last year, for the first time. It seemed to do pretty well, looked healthy and strong, but I was a little disappointed with the stems when I harvested it. I left it in as long as I could but even then the stems were extremely skinny, not really good for anything else but putting in stews and casseroles. I don't know if it's the self blanching varieties that don't grow thick, strong stems or just the particular circumstances of my crop, but it didn't look anything like the big crunchy stems you buy in the shops, no good for salads really.
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: zazen999 on February 18, 2010, 08:22
I did some self blanching celery last year, for the first time. It seemed to do pretty well, looked healthy and strong, but I was a little disappointed with the stems when I harvested it. I left it in as long as I could but even then the stems were extremely skinny, not really good for anything else but putting in stews and casseroles. I don't know if it's the self blanching varieties that don't grow thick, strong stems or just the particular circumstances of my crop, but it didn't look anything like the big crunchy stems you buy in the shops, no good for salads really.

That's because it is grown in water for the shops; try the method above - grown in pots with access to water from start to finish. It goes stringy without plenty of water and will grow bigger if it has ample fertiliser and space.
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: Salmo on February 18, 2010, 10:16
When do you sow the seeds?
Title: Re: Celery
Post by: zazen999 on February 18, 2010, 10:51
As soon as it is warm enough - now if you have somewhere really warm but April for me.