Most conventional vegetable crops are on the wane by now, but the short days mean only one thing for Oca...
...make tubers, and make 'em fast! These stem-borne Oca tubers are getting noticeably bigger every day, and I've no doubt that those underground are similarly ascendant. In fact, in places I can see the soil surface starting to heave upwards from the pressure of the swelling crop.
A hands-and-knees survey of the plot discovers plenty more underground action. This is the Ulluco doing its best to tuberise...
...and doing better than last year, when they were already frosted by now.
Chinese artichokes tubers are also bulking up. These are from the plants used as ground cover under climbing beans in the 'root crops as ground cover trial'.
And scraping around the base of a Yacon in the 'Not the Three Sisters' bed reveals sizable storage tubers.
All this bodes well for bumper crops. But of course, a frost could easily put a damper on that.
Unfortunately someone else has noticed all this underground fodder. This is a large excavation on one side of the 'All-Tuber Polyculture Mound'...
Oca, Chi-chokes, and bits of Yacon are scattered around. Rats could be the culprits, although a lot of the uncovered tubers have not been eaten. Then again maybe it's a fox. Anyway, the damage has put a halt to a lot of the plants in the mound.
Grrrrr!
Showing posts with label Chinese artichoke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chinese artichoke. Show all posts
Sunday, 13 November 2011
Sunday, 5 June 2011
The All-Tuber Polyculture Mound, Part 2 ... Room for One More
A previous post showed how last year I used mound culture to grow a mixed tuber crop (Yacon, Oca, and Chinese artichokes) with the minimum of labour input.
Here's what's left of the mound...
...untouched since last December when it was torn open to yield over 20 lb of harvest. As I anticipated, there are plenty of volunteer Oca and Chinese artichokes appearing amongst the annual weeds this year, so I only need to add a Yacon to restore last year's successful system.
Less than five minutes after the previous photo...
... and the weeds are blotted out by a heavy covering of garden compost, and a pot-started Yacon is added to the top of the heap.
This much compost might seem like an extravagance, until one thinks back to the amount of biomass which was removed at harvest; here's the near hernia-inducing Yacon root as a reminder...
I'm also adding a fourth member to the polyculture. The Hog Peanut, or Talet (Amphicarpaea bracteata) is not a true tuber-crop, so stretches the concept slightly, but will clamber and twine amongst the Yacon, potentially fix nitrogen, and hopefully add to the overall interest and subterranean yield of the mound with its wacky underground beans.
It's another self-propagator by all reports, so like the Oca and Chinese artichokes, it should be back every year...
Labels:
Chinese artichoke,
companion planting,
Hog Peanut,
Oca,
yacon
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