I started picking my Onward maincrop peas in early July. I had a tremendous crop, and was picking throughout the remainder of July and into August. However, I picked the very last pods in the first week of this month, when the plants were beginning to look a bit tired and listless, with no signs of further production, and turned to the Cavalier. I didn`t get around to removing the haulm, deciding to save it until I`d got a good binful of stuff ready to compost
A week or so later I noticed new bright green foliage appearing in the tops of the plants, so I gave them a good dosing with High Potash liquid fertilizer and repeated this a week later. Now a full 1/3rd of the plants have fresh green crowns, with flowers and buds appearing in abundance, and every promise of several further pickings.
I wonder if the roots were starting to go dry...and as we've had some rain they have recovered enough for some new growth...
No. I can guarantee that at no time did they go dry at the roots. They were, if anything, rather pampered in the way of watering, and as I said they had already produced more than I usually get by the time they had finished, so this new flush is a genuine bonus.
I've had an unusually abundant crop of mangetout Sugar Ann. I just treated the plants as I normally do, but I think the hot weather that came after planting out has kept them flourishing. I kept them well watered, of course, but other than that, I think they've simply responded to favourable growing conditions. :)
Unlike my potatoes and onions. ::)
It's a year of contrasts, that's for sure. ;D
Same here - I picked Kelvedon Wonder from mid-June to end July, left the dead haulms in till I had more time - went to clear them yesterday and had another meals worth of pods resprouted from the tops. Don't know why, but next year I'll certainly leave them again.