Brussels Sprouts Seven Hills

£5.99

Unlike other sprouts these will mature at different times giving fresh sprouts over several weeks or months, plants are not too tall and will stand well in bad weather and it is essential a cold weather vegetable.

Brussels Sprouts Seven Hills Information

  • Your plants will arrive as deep-rooted single sown plugs, ready to be planted out

  • Number of vegetable plant plugs in the box: 10
  • Latin name for Brussels Sprouts Seven Hills: Brassica oleracea var. gemmifera
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An old variety which develops into small robust and incredibly hardy plants, Seven Hills are well flavoured and crop well from December through to March. A good choice for more exposed sites, Seven Hills is a rare heritage variety brought back from the brink of extinction. The secret to growing good brassicas is to keep your soil well fed, as these crops have high nutrient requirements. They also need a slightly more alkaline soil than most garden crops, so the addition of a little bit of garden lime before planting can work wonders. Also make sure you keep them well netted – pigeons go crazy for these plants and will pick your crops for you if you’re not careful!

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Summer delivery, Autumn Delivery

What to do when your plants arrive

  1. Unpack them. Your seedlings will arrive carefully packed in bio-degradable straw, cardboard and paper. They may look a little bit bedraggled from their journey. Don’t panic – this is totally normal and they should soon perk up. Please try and unpack your plants as soon as they arrive, as every extra hour they spend in the box will add to the stress of travelling to their new home.
  2. Give them a drink. Having spent a day or two in the post, your new plants will be thirsty! Stand them up in some fresh water for a few minutes to make sure their roots have been thoroughly soaked before planting.
  3. Plant them out into their forever home! Your plants can’t wait to get their roots into the soil. Plant them out according to the instructions that will have come in the box with them. Make sure you water them in well, and give them plenty to drink until their roots have had a chance to get settled.

Substitutions

As you well know, plants are unpredictable creatures and so is the British weather. As such, we reserve the right to substitute items in your order for an equivalent variety. To find out more about substitutions, please take a look at our terms and conditions.

Delivery

We charge a flat shipping fee of £6.99 per shipping season. If you order everything from one season ie Spring you will be charged once, if you order Spring and Summer you will be charged twice etc. We do not ship outside of the UK.

Where can I send a gift card?

All of our products are available to send to UK addresses only. The products that the recipient can redeem their gift card on will only be mailed to a UK postal address. Postage is free for physical Gift Cards, as well as on the products that can be redeemed.

Terms and Conditions

Please click here for further information including returns and refunds.

Planning your site

Brassicas need deep, firm, moisture retentive soil and like to be planted in a sunny site whether grown in raised beds or a well dug veg patch. We would recommend giving your brassicas up to 45cm between them as they can get quite big (which is how we like them isnt it!)

Growing tips

When you plant your brassicas, a really top tip is to put a 10cm diameter circle of old carpet or cardboard on the soil around the stem. This is known as a brassica collar and it will protect your brassicas from the dreaded cabbage root fly. Regular watering is very important during dry spells and you do not want your plants to dry out in general. Use a liquid nitrogen feed once they’ve started to produce new growth.

What to watch out for

Cabbage White Butterflies are a beautiful but terrible scourge of brassicas! They lay eggs on the plants which soon become very very hungry caterpillars which will decimate your crop unbelievably quickly. If you see white butterflies flitting around then shoo them away or even better, make sure your brassicas are well netted. This will also deter pigeons which are another major problem for good brassica growth. Flea beetles attack swedes and turnips though radishes are the worst affected. Whitefly may cover brassicas and great clouds of them will fly up when the leaves are disturbed though they don’t do too much damage on the whole. Cabbage root fly and club root infection are major problems for brassicas and we recommend that you familiarise yourself with the symptoms and management procedures if you are growing these plants.

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