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Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
May Lotito wrote:My sunchokes bloom abundantly in October, providing food for bees and butterflies. But since the seeds are not viable, am I supposed to remove the tops so energy won't go to the seed heads? Will the seed heads feed birds later on? I snapped some plants shorter since high wind just blew them sideways. Has anybody compared yields with or without deheading the flowers/seeds?
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Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
May Lotito wrote:Thanks for the reply. I planted these tubers too shallow on heavy clay soil. They grew very well though, up to 12 ft with branching flower stems at the end. These all make them very unstable in high wind. One clump ( from a single tuber) was totally uprooted so I dig out all the tubers. They were all within top 1 ft of soil and weighed over 8 lbs. Quite a surprise as I thought they wouldn't filled out so much until the above ground parts die back.
I will let other clumps die back and compare the yield to the early harvest.
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Cécile Stelzer Johnson wrote:
I think that in order to get nice big uniform roots is to make sure to remove all of them in the Fall, select your best and replant within a month, like garlic.
Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
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May Lotito wrote:
Cécile Stelzer Johnson wrote:
I think that in order to get nice big uniform roots is to make sure to remove all of them in the Fall, select your best and replant within a month, like garlic.
I bought mine off local craigslist: $20 for 4 lbs, freshly dug out of ground. I probably ate too much at a time and got gassy so I grew them as privacy screens mostly. But today I tried moderate amount and so far so good 6 hours later. Guess sunchoke will be a staple food for me too.
I plan on doing the same: remover all the tubers and sort them out. Only the biggest one will be planted back for next season and smaller ones cooked or pickled.
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Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
May Lotito wrote:I am considering planting medium size tubers rather than the big onesback in the ground. I dug up several more clumps as the top starting to die back. Clumps with 3 to 4 stems yield 13 lbs on average, good size and evenly distributed. And for the biggest plant with 8 stems, also the one that toppled over in the storm, the area 2 ft wide and 1 ft deep was filled with tubers. So many got no room to grow they were squeezed flat. The yield was over 30 lbs from this single plant. I had to dig a bigger hole in ground to put them back for storage.
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Cécile Stelzer Johnson wrote:Also, is your soil sandy, like mine? Roots will travel a bit father in sand than they will in clay.
If you make 2 beds, one with large tubers and one with smaller tubers, but both of them in great soil, you will get your answer. Please let us know how they compare. This is very interesting to me.
Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
Gardens in my mind never need water
Castles in the air never have a wet basement
Well made buildings are fractal -- equally intelligent design at every level of detail.
Bright sparks remind others that they too can dance
What I am looking for is looking for me too!
The only thing...more expensive than education is ignorance.~Ben Franklin
Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
May Lotito wrote:I found another use for sunchoke tubers: chicken food. They always came over and pecked on the tubers when I was digging. Leaving whole tubers for the chicken is too wasteful so I dice a few into tidbit everyday as feed. They are more welcomed in cold days, when water freezes easily and the chickens can get some moisture without wetting their wattles.
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Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
May Lotito wrote:I have been tasting the sunchoke tubers harvested in different times, the later ones are less earthy and raw but still not sweet. Once I sampled a jar a unfinished fermented sunchoke, one actually was so sweet and crunchy I thought I was eating water chestnut. I was not able to reproduce the result however.
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Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
Zone 6, 45 inches precipitation, hard clay soil
With appropriate microbes, minerals and organic matter, there is no need for pesticides or herbicides.
Faye Streiff wrote:This past year I started a new patch for the sunchokes. Threw out winter wheat in Late November over the patch, and a little light mulch of grass clippings since I could not rake it in. Both did well in spite of deer damage to both of them, but I think that light “deer pruning” was good for the sunchokes as it made them bunch up and grow much denser tops, and more able to send energy to the tubers. When the wheat ripened in late spring, I just cut off or broke off the tops and left the long stems, which fell over and further mulched the sunchokes, now 12 inches or so high. I also save those dried sunchoke stems for kindling and firestarter.
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With appropriate microbes, minerals and organic matter, there is no need for pesticides or herbicides.
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