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Allotment Stuff => The Basics => Topic started by: emma h on March 15, 2006, 15:00:31

Title: What do you do with your leggy/runty plants
Post by: emma h on March 15, 2006, 15:00:31
Hi
This is my first year, and I'm having a lot of fun. My first broad beans were very leggy (I left them on a heated mat thinking this would be good..I've now learned it isn't ;D)

I now have attempt 2 which are small and bushy rather than tall, but what do I do with my leggy ones? and any other thinnings/2nd class plants? do you just throw them on the compost heap or do you plant them up anyway? It seems a skame to dump them after all that nurturing

Emma
Title: Re: What do you do with your leggy/runty plants
Post by: sandersj89 on March 15, 2006, 16:24:38
I tend to compost my weak plants prefer to grow on the better specimens. For this reason I always over sow.

Jerry
Title: Re: What do you do with your leggy/runty plants
Post by: Sprout on March 17, 2006, 10:23:50
I 'recycle' some of them (the healthly looking ones) by planting them deeper in a bigger pot. Seems a shame to waste them somehow.
Title: Re: What do you do with your leggy/runty plants
Post by: Trixiebelle on March 17, 2006, 13:29:05
I can never bear to throw them away. I've currently got a dozen leggy sunflowers in the kitchen propped up with lolly sticks.

THEY HAVE FEELINGS YOU KNOW  ;D
Title: Re: What do you do with your leggy/runty plants
Post by: Dan 2 on March 18, 2006, 10:43:51
Try pinching out the top of the leggy seedlings for things like peas and beans and they will grow more bushier with sideshoots. Hope this helps, Dan :-)
Title: Re: What do you do with your leggy/runty plants
Post by: supersprout on March 18, 2006, 10:54:16
glad you're enjoying this emma h ;) :D
Jerry's approach may sound ruthless, but apparently your yield from plants in the prime of condition is '00s more than from runty leggy ones. I wish I could be as tough, it's very hard not to get sentimental. Maybe compromise - I cut leggy plants above the first true leaves, and they will sprout from the joints and make a more bushy plant. Even so, if the weather's not with us, into the compost they go ::)