Asparagus Seedlings

They weren’t being very photogenic, small green things on a grey background, but most of the asparagus I posted about a few days ago are in the garden.  Wow, 30 varieties!

The germination rate of the seeds was phenomenal!   Nearly 100% for most accessions.  I wonder if the folks at GRIN use magic pixy dust or something.  I’ve never had that good a rate of germination from asparagus before.  It’s not unusual to get a rate of 0%, maybe more often I spend a lot of money for a package of 10 seeds, and 2 germinate.  These packages were labelled 50 seeds, and the very worst yielded 8 plants in the end, which is enough.

One company I bought asparagus seeds from this year had 10 seeds per packet.  I figured I would order 3 packets for about 3 euros a package, just in case of low germination, and none of them germinated.  I was very annoyed.

Well you can do the math — 30 packages of 50 seeds, with a say 90% germination rate gives 1350 asparagus seedlings.  Needless to say I didn’t have space for them all.  It was more than I expected, and had to change gardening plans a bit to find space for about half of them.  It’s a problem of luxury we gardeners have sometimes.  After the first year I should have crowns to transplant, and I’ll probably be able to do some initial selections then.  I probably don’t have enough space for 30 different varieties…

The Snail of Happiness

I came across this site a few days ago, and thought I’d mention it here.

I think it’s written by a she, who’s interested in permaculture, sustainable living and gardening.  In her most recent post she mentions she has a PhD in land reclamation:

…which involved studying the re-creation of vegetation systems on restored open cast coal sites. I am fascinated by looking at natural relationships and seeing how these can be applied to physical and social systems created by people. For me, the easiest way to think about this sort of design is in my garden, because I understand the value and function of things like soil structure, micro-organisms, micro-climate, water, pollinators, decomposers and vegetation. But I am increasingly intrigued about how I can apply systems-level thinking to other aspects of my life: starting a new business, working with other people, designing a course for adult learners…

Her blog is already bringing back memories of the first few years of this blog, and I think it’s going to be very interesting to follow as she goes along.

Speaker Finalist TEDxWageningen

I’ve applied as a speaker at TEDxWageningen later this year, 30 May. I’ve been short-listed as a finalist but not yet selected. As part of the application process they’ve asked us all to submit a 1-2 minute video promoting ourselves, and giving a glimpse into what we might talk about. You can view my competition on their YouTube channel, and my submission is embedded below.

Wageningen is the main agricultural university in the Netherlands.

More Amsterdam Seed Exchange Videos

The first is a photo montage of the seed exchange put together by the same person who did the video in my last post. This is a great example of ‘citizen journalism’ — thanks for whoever made these videos!

The second video here is of the day following the seed exchange, where some people got together and started a garden on an empty construction site in Amsterdam.