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Have you ever seen Brussels Sprouts growing?
These might not be the best example
but that's kind of what they look like
I've never grown brussel sprouts before,
but I've certainly eaten quite a few,
and i've always enjoyed that. So that I would give them a try
when I saw them for sale as sprouts
at the nursery this last spring.
Tried growing them in several different environments and most of them
really didn't do well here in the yard
discovered uh...
that there are these little white moths
that are incredibly attracted to any and all cabbages.
And Brussels Sprouts are
a member of the cabbage family.
Normally I'm happy try anything I've grown
but I'm just
not going to go there with these.
However for interest sake,
I thought I'd show you just what we've got here,
take a look at the Brussels Sprout
plant that i've got here,
and just talk a little bit about how it grows.
I've never grown brussel sprouts before so this is
definitely the best job i've ever done
but i'm still gonna classify this as a big
fail for this year.
That doesn't mean I'm not and try again next year. That just means, I'm going to go about
I'm just going to go about things,
completely different.
The Brussels Sprout has been a very interesting plant to watch grow over the
last few months.
It forms in
little cabbage head that I think we're all quite familiar with,
and those heads just grow up
the stock of the plant as you can see here,
and form
at the base of the leaves.
When grown properly,
which, again I emphasize, this was not
they can produce up to three pounds of these Brussel Sprouts per plant,
sometimes numbering over a hundred individual sprouts per plant.
Now these are wonderfully good for you high in fiber,
lots of Vitamin A, lots of Vitamin C
Certain foodies suggest that Brussels Sprouts might even help prevent
certain cancers.
I can't prove any of that, but I find it very interesting.
Let's take a closer look at this plant.
As we get closer and take a better look, it will soon become quite obvious why
i'm not going to eat this planet
As you can see,
it's covered with little bugs
and i'm just of the school that there's not enough cleaning to make that
safe to eat.
Not quite sure what those little bugs are
we tend to think aphids,
but I haven't looked it up.
One of the things that went terribly wrong with our
Brussels Sprouts this year,
is that all the leaves
seemed to brown,
and kind of fall off
into the ground
which I suspect is why these particular sprouts are so stunted
but as you can see
they grow in amongst the leaves right on the stem,
and the top of the plant
very much reminds one of a cabbage.
Which makes sense because, again
they're a member of the cabbage family.
One thing that's kinda interesting about the Brussels Sprouts is that you don't have
to harvest the whole stock at once.
If you just want a few off the bottom,
assuming of course they're healthy to eat,
you just pluck off the ones you want
and the rest of it will continue growing.
I'm just going to harvest these and find out how many I got, for curiosity sake.
While that may not be a lot,
but considering how stunted they are, and the fact that it's from a single plant,
that's not bad.
And more than enough to feed the average family, considering kids
don't usually like them.
On that note,
with a little cheese sauce, I think these things are fantastic
Aside from all those moths, which I was
completely not prepared for,
I think one place I went terribly wrong with these guys this year was just too much water!
Apparently Brussel Sprouts do like a nice soil thats got a good
moisture content,
something like compost that will really hold the moisture well
but at the same time they want to be fairly well drained.
I'm not sure a flooded wicking bucket is the place to grow these.
I'll definitely be growing these again next year,
trying a few different systems for it
making sure their soil drains better
trying to keep those bugs away
this has been JT Bear, at Clean Valley Farms,
with, "Trying to grow Brussels Sprouts."
Thanks for watching,
have a great day!