Scrapbook image

Your scrapbook

Forgotten your details?

Enter your email address and we'll send your username and password to you

London

  • FairToday
    9°C/22°C
  • ShowersTomorrow
    9°C/18°C
  • See Gardeners'
    7-day forecast

Our Gardeners' 7-day forecast warns you of changing weather conditions (including frost, high wind and drought) and suggests actions to take to protect your plants.

Advertisement

Gardeners World blog

RSS RSS | What is RSS?

Allotments

Red cabbages

Posted by: Jane Moore, 27 March 2008, 11.11AM

Red cabbage covered in frost I have a confession to make. After raving about the arrival of the purple sprouting broccoli and extolling the virtues of winter veg in my blog last week I realised that I had forgotten to mention red cabbages.

Not only are red cabbages easy to grow but they're also rather gorgeous to look at. Their rich colour lifts your spirits on a chilly winter day when everything else is looking drab and dull. As with all brassicas, red cabbages need protection from pests, but as I grew mine over winter I didn't have to worry about the attentions of cabbage white caterpillars. I still had to protect them from pigeons, though.

It's a bit of a happy accident that I ended up growing red cabbages. I bought a few plants towards the end of last summer for no better reason than they looked nice and I hadn't grown any before. I planted the cabbages in the brassica bed along with a few pak choi, some summer cabbages and the purple sprouting broccoli and covered the lot with netting to protect them from the hungry pigeons.

Over autumn they developed hearts and throughout the winter months they've endured rain, winds and last weekend's hail and snow. I've been harvesting them selectively, trying to save them for special roast dinners with friends as they're so good. The only trouble is that I can't tell you what variety it was as the label has long since blown away.

Comments

  • greeny

    27 March 2008, 09.58PM

    mine is called redbor and it's an f1 variety. haven't sown it yet, cos i missed the window of opportunity before I got my plot, but i can't wait. my plot is going to look really peculiar with red cabbage, purple carrots, yellow cucumber, white peppers, white aubergines, magenta sprouts and all sort of all weird and wonderful stuff...

Leave a comment

We'd love you to post a comment, but please be aware of our Code of Conduct.

Please email gworld@bbc.co.uk to report any comments you feel are inappropriate. Please detail the post title and the comment you are referring to in your email. We'll take a look, and take appropriate action.

By submitting your contribution to this site, you confirm your acceptance of the website terms.

Thank you for your comment

Thank you for your comments. All comments will be looked at by a moderator, however, due to the numbers of comments we receive, we can't promise that all will be posted on the site.

 

Subscribe to the magazine

May edition of Gardeners' World Magazine

In May...
The May issue is on sale from 29 April. Subscribe today and receive the next three issues of Gardeners' World magazine for just £1.

The UK's number 1 gardening magazine

Our show

BBC Gardener's World Live

Gardeners' World Live, 11-15 June 2008

See details

TV & Radio

Television icon

What's on this week

Find out what gardening programmes are on TV and radio this week. And read more about the Gardeners' World programme.

Offer

Planter

Buy a Felco pruning set for just £44.99

BBC Magazines

© BBC Magazines Ltd. BBC Worldwide Ltd.

The BBC Gardeners' World Magazine word mark and logo are trademarks of BBC Worldwide Ltd.

BBC Magazines is owned by the BBC and our profits are returned to the BBC for the benefit of the licence-fee payer.