Thanks for sharing your successes, gents! That encourages me.
Apparently, some people subdivide theirs every three years - though for me, I don't like unnecessary work, so I'm just going to subdivide it and plant it in it's newer more permanent spot this fall, and only ever subdivide it again if I want extra plants, or after ten years when the individual plants choke themselves out by propagating from their roots.
I'll prepare a good permanent location in advance, and move half my asparagus this fall, to ensure they survive, and the following fall I'll move the other half if all went well. My speculation is after subdividing them, I can probably fill four or five times the existing space. Based on what I know from harvesting my beds the past few years, I'd speculate each of my original plants now have about 7 plants present on the same cluster, and I wouldn't be surprised if it was alot more once I get digging.
Cindy Skillman wrote:I’m interested in growing asparagus but I’ve never done it
I strongly encourage it! Once they are established (which is fairly quickly), it's the easiest thing in my garden - easy, because I forget it exists until it's time to harvest. They've taken years of abuse and neglect from me, and survived fine, including me forgetting to water them during hot 100°F summers, and the beds getting choked with weeds.
[Edit:] This ofcourse varies by area. What's easy to grow in my area, may be a pain to grow in yours, and vise-versa.
Multiple years I've come out to my dead garden to examine the previous years' failures, and see the asparagus start poking up ready to be harvested, as a welcome reminder to keep trying. Asparagus is the perennial plant in my garden that has
my back, rather than the other way around.
Or maybe my asparagus just feels bad for me. =D