Picture of Medwyn Williams

Medwyn Williams

Hello. I'm Medwyn Williams – eleven times Gold medal winner at the Chelsea Flower Show, Past Chairman of the Royal Horticultural Society Fruit Vegetable and Herb Committee and President of the National Vegetable Society.

The Backbone of any Vegetable Stand

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Even though I managed to get a Gold medal at Chelsea last year I was disappointed that I was unable to stage what I would normally call the back bone of any vegetable stand, Celery and Large Onions. The latter grew to about twelve inches in circumference which is really not big enough to take centre stage in such a prestigious show as Chelsea.

Even though I managed to get a Gold medal at Chelsea last year I was disappointed that I was unable to stage what I would normally call the back bone of any vegetable stand, Celery and Large Onions.

Large Onions

The latter grew to about twelve inches in circumference which is really not big enough to take centre stage in such a prestigious show as Chelsea. This year the seed was sown earlier, towards the end of July and looks this time like I might be able to harvest them at around the 16 inches mark.

Celery

What has pleased me though this year is the Ideal celery, it was potted on into twelve inch pots early in March and has kept growing remarkably well and was given it’s first loose collar during mid March. The problem last year was that it constantly kept having heart rot, just as the plant was producing new growth from the centre, so they rotted away.

Having had a chat with Bob Herbert who can really grow celery to a high standard, in fact Bob can stage them with a 28 inch blanch and 28 inches in circumference, he told me that the plats were probably starving and that I should introduce more soil into the mix. At every potting stage this time I have mixed in sieved soil from my onion with some M2 initially and m3 for the final 12 inch pot. The ratio was 4 parts soil to 3 parts M3 and an extra 4 ounces of Vitax Q4 to every bushel of mixture.

The plants are now about 2 ft 6″ high and look as if they are going to be really good specimens, watering is of course very important with celery and must be kept up regularly, particularly so when grown in pots.some years ago I grew six plants as a trial potting them on right through to a 14″ diameter pot. During the last 6 weeks of their growth they were watered at least twice a day and given liquid feeds very other day. Of the six, I was able to stage three heads at the National Vegetable Society Championships at Ayr and though they never came in the cards, they were the longest blanched there but unfortunately one head had started developing heart rot. It did however prove that if you haven’t got the room for growing celery it can most definitely be grown in containers provide that you are prepare to give the plant regular amounts of water and liquid supplementary feeding.

The plants for the Summer and Autumn shows are now all growing well and they have also been given the added soil to my normal M2 and M3 compost. I explained in my column before about the centre young growth in the pots going brown and getting what can only be describe as the early onset of celery heart rot. When removing the plants from their pots, the roots were wiry and brown and Bob Herbert was convinced that the plant were starving and not having sufficient nutrients to maintain growth.

This year there is no sign of the browning syndrome and the roots are white and healthy so I might well be lucky enough to get some really good heads this Summer.

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