Sweetcorn germination tips required please!
Moderators: KG Steve, Chantal, Tigger, peter
Hi Geoff and Chez,
I am with you on the sowing time as I shall not start mine off at least before the begining of next month. Sweet Corn is one of the plants that resents any sort of check in growth and if you can so time it so that the plants progress and are just filling the pot with root as you plant out.
The Commercial Maize growers on the next plot have not even started to plough yet. I realize that they are only growing for Silage but they do get some
super Cobs and they are a little lacking in the taste in comparison with the Supers and Sugar types but still make good eating never the less.
I am with you on the sowing time as I shall not start mine off at least before the begining of next month. Sweet Corn is one of the plants that resents any sort of check in growth and if you can so time it so that the plants progress and are just filling the pot with root as you plant out.
The Commercial Maize growers on the next plot have not even started to plough yet. I realize that they are only growing for Silage but they do get some
super Cobs and they are a little lacking in the taste in comparison with the Supers and Sugar types but still make good eating never the less.
JB.
- Deb P
- KG Regular
- Posts: 301
- Joined: Tue Nov 22, 2005 9:09 pm
- Location: Derbyshire
- Has thanked: 1 time
- Been thanked: 2 times
Thanks for all the advice, amazingly the corn I planted very shallowly on Friday (tops level with soil) are showing some shoots already!
Perhaps it was a combination of sowing a bit later (though by this time last year I was hardening off sweetcorn in late April)and the surface sowing which has made the difference.
I still have a few seeds left, so I'm also going to try the 'sprouting ' method recommended by Mandylew and John too, thanks for those tips.
Perhaps it was a combination of sowing a bit later (though by this time last year I was hardening off sweetcorn in late April)and the surface sowing which has made the difference.
I still have a few seeds left, so I'm also going to try the 'sprouting ' method recommended by Mandylew and John too, thanks for those tips.
-
Anonymous
Well, Deb P, we have given the shallow covering of seed a whirl for the first time this year. So far germination of 18 out of 20 seeds sown, so shall certinly give this method another whirl next year.
Still on sweetcorn, but slightly off thread, has anyone grown the variety Minipop? I have bought the seed. Apparently you start harvesting when the tassels start to show, rather than when they are wilting.
Any advice would be very much appreciated.
valmarg
Still on sweetcorn, but slightly off thread, has anyone grown the variety Minipop? I have bought the seed. Apparently you start harvesting when the tassels start to show, rather than when they are wilting.
Any advice would be very much appreciated.
valmarg
Hello Valmarg
I tried Minipop last year. Never again! The plants are not 'mini' only the tiny little cobs. My plants grew well over 6' tall took up a great deal of room and at the end of the season were a real problem to dispose of. The cobs were a nice treat but difficult to catch at the right stage - leave them a little too long and they were horny and useless. Comparing the small amount of cobs to the size of the huge plant they were very unproductive.
I'd say that if you have a spare patch that you don't need for anything else and you want to try something really different then have a go but otherwise don't bother.
John
I tried Minipop last year. Never again! The plants are not 'mini' only the tiny little cobs. My plants grew well over 6' tall took up a great deal of room and at the end of the season were a real problem to dispose of. The cobs were a nice treat but difficult to catch at the right stage - leave them a little too long and they were horny and useless. Comparing the small amount of cobs to the size of the huge plant they were very unproductive.
I'd say that if you have a spare patch that you don't need for anything else and you want to try something really different then have a go but otherwise don't bother.
John
- Deb P
- KG Regular
- Posts: 301
- Joined: Tue Nov 22, 2005 9:09 pm
- Location: Derbyshire
- Has thanked: 1 time
- Been thanked: 2 times
I also tried Minipop last year, some in a half barrel, some in open ground. Both grew well, also about 6' tall, with 2-4 cobs per plant. However, I also had the problem of telling when they were ready, and concequently all of mine were left too long and were as hard as nails! Made a nice treat for the birds over the winter though...
-
Anonymous
Oh dear John and Deb P, that's a bit disappointing. I was going to try them in a spare bit of garden. Having bought the seed, I might as well grow them.
Thanks for the info.
valmarg
Thanks for the info.
valmarg
Hi Geoff,
A few years ago my neighbour who was then a Dairy Farmer had some Maize Silage that went off and smelt peculiar and I had two trailer loads (farm) dumped into the Orchard and I covered with black Polythene and pegged it down and left it for two years and in that time it had made the most wonderful compost just like soil.
Sadly it was that family entity that the Badgers put paid to and now they are no longer in farming.
A few years ago my neighbour who was then a Dairy Farmer had some Maize Silage that went off and smelt peculiar and I had two trailer loads (farm) dumped into the Orchard and I covered with black Polythene and pegged it down and left it for two years and in that time it had made the most wonderful compost just like soil.
Sadly it was that family entity that the Badgers put paid to and now they are no longer in farming.
JB.
-
Mr Potato Head
Here's the link to the KG issue for growing sweetcorn...
www.classicissues.com
You can search our archive, but I'm afraid it doesn't contain any back-issues prior to the Mortons takeover...
www.classicissues.com
You can search our archive, but I'm afraid it doesn't contain any back-issues prior to the Mortons takeover...
- Compo
- KG Regular
- Posts: 1428
- Joined: Thu Mar 16, 2006 8:58 pm
- Location: Somerset
- Been thanked: 14 times
I sewed Kelvedon Wonder last week in peat free compost (composted bark from B & Q) in modules watered them every day in the unheated greenhouse and every seed seems to have little green shoot on today, so maybe it is the drainage that they need as this compost is quite coarse....Not sure how they will taste however, look forward to that in a few months.
If I am not on the plot, I am not happy.........

