Sweet corn seedlings wind snapped
Moderators: KG Steve, Chantal, Tigger, peter
- Primrose
- KG Regular
- Posts: 8096
- Joined: Tue Aug 29, 2006 8:50 pm
- Location: Bucks.
- Has thanked: 47 times
- Been thanked: 324 times
I put my sweet corn seedlings out out my mini greenhouse for a few hours today to harden off but have just discovered that the wind has bent over all the shoots about halfway up, to the extent of virtually snapping them all about halfway up. Are they now useless and should I resow, or will they recover and grow new "innards"?
Hello Primrose
Don't like to see postings slowly going down the list without any replies so I'll have go at this one. My guess is that they will recover well from a setback like this. Sweetcorn is grass-like in nature and growth is from the base rather than a growing tip so you should be OK. If you are in any doubt though there is still time to sow again as it will germinate very quickly even outdoors now.
John
PS I find the 5" root trainers ideal for sweetcorn.
Don't like to see postings slowly going down the list without any replies so I'll have go at this one. My guess is that they will recover well from a setback like this. Sweetcorn is grass-like in nature and growth is from the base rather than a growing tip so you should be OK. If you are in any doubt though there is still time to sow again as it will germinate very quickly even outdoors now.
John
PS I find the 5" root trainers ideal for sweetcorn.
The Gods do not subtract from the allotted span of men’s lives, the hours spent fishing Assyrian tablet
What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning Werner Heisenberg
I am a man and the world is my urinal
What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning Werner Heisenberg
I am a man and the world is my urinal
- FelixLeiter
- KG Regular
- Posts: 830
- Joined: Tue Apr 28, 2009 12:18 pm
- Location: East Yorkshire
I had this happen to my sweetcorn three years ago. They looked absolutely terrible for about two weeks, but they recovered. Not only did the tops keel over, many of them leant to over 45º. I was ready to start again with them but gave them a chance. They're a grass, so grow from the base and are able to right themselves. I got an excellent crop in the end, sweet and succulent. Summer's not summer without sweetcorn.
If any of my lottie neighbours are reading this they'll be sighing as our resident badger feasted nightly on last years sweetcorn,he worked his way across almost the whole site.I don't think anyone harvested more than a couple of cobs many of the plotholders are giving it a miss for a while.We are growing ours at home this year as our koi carp love it 
sanity is overrated
