Freshly harvested garlic Each rhizome should have ‘bumps’ which will develop, in time, into growing shoots.
Break / cut each rhizome into chunks about 5cm long, each one with a ‘bump’. Plant these, five to 10cm deep, 15cm apart 15cm between rows: Alternatively, one chunk per 10-inch pot.
Keep watered, give a feed of organic liquid fertiliser once a month, keep weed free and six to eight months later you should have succulent fresh ginger to harvest. Plus, throughout the growing period, it will send up delightful, if rather tall, greenery with, if you are lucky, the benefit of some pretty, fragrant, flowers too. Ginger plants are perfectly at home in prepared flower beds as well as in the herb / vegetable patch.
When starting off ginger, in the plains and coastal regions, from November to February, it is wise to provide night time protection in the form of plastic covers — cut in half water bottles are great — and these can, if day time temperatures are on the low side too, be left in place day and night until spring arrives in force. Or, you can, of course, start off ginger, inside the house, on a sunny windowsill and plant it out when the weather warms up.
Garlic is easy to grow by planting individual cloves. It needs rich, well drained soil in a sunny location. It can also be grown in wooden crates / containers. It needs quite a long growing period to yield bulbs of any size but is worth growing for its ‘cut and come again’ greenery alone.
On the flower front, this month you can still sow seeds of the following: cosmos, Queen Anne’s lace, ageratum, pansies, cornflower, linum, petunia, arcotis, brachycome, candytuft, linaria, sweet peas, larkspur, cornflowers, sweet sultan, alyssum, phacelia, bellis, nemophila and poppies of all kinds.
Vegetables to sow this month include: spring cabbage, cauliflower, Chinese cabbage, spinach, Swiss chard / leaf beet, pak choi, chopsuey greens, giant red mustard, mustard mizuna, fast maturing varieties of calabresse, radish of all kinds, spring onions, beans, peas, potatoes, rutabaga / swedes, turnips, celery, chicory, endive, lettuce and tomatoes providing you give them protection on cold nights.
Herbs to sow: parsley, borage, lemon balm, watercress, lovage, dill, aniseed, chamomile, chervil, coriander, chives, garlic chives, oregano, marjoram, thyme, sage, rosemary, fast maturing varieties of lavender, mint, nasturtiums and calendula.
Fruit trees to go in December to February, providing they are climatically suitable to your locality, include: apples, pears, peaches, plums, nectarines, olives, apricots, cherries, oranges, lemons, grapefruit, mango, loquat, kumquat, custard apple, chikoo, guava, coconut, date, star fruit, banana and jamun. Dwarf fruit trees can be grown in very large clay pots / containers.
Fruiting vines and fruit shrubs/plants: grapes, passion fruit, kiwi fruit, falsa and those ever popular strawberries about which, due to demand, there will be a full column in two weeks time.
Please continue sending your gardening queries to zahrahnasir@hotmail.com. Remember to include your location. The writer does not respond directly by email. Emails with attachments will not be opened.
Published in Dawn, Sunday Magazine, December 6th, 2015