Planting peas and asparagus on your site

If you have a garden, even if it is not large, then sooner or later you will want to try all the vegetables or fruits and berries. Likewise, planting peas and asparagus may interest you.
Asparagus is a herbaceous vegetable plant that can grow in one place for up to 15 years. Its underground young shoots are eaten. Such shoots contain a very large amount of vitamins and other nutrients.
Asparagus propagates by seedlings. It is very important to fertilize and cultivate the soil very well before planting asparagus seedlings.
Caring for asparagus is not difficult. Over the entire summer, it is necessary to weed the beds 4 times. In the autumn, the holes with the plant must be leveled, and next year in the spring they must be completely filled up. At the same time, asparagus must be harrowed in the spring and processed in the summer in the same way as in the first year.
The area where asparagus grows must be well loosened, weeds destroyed and fertilized with manure, then your asparagus will produce a very good harvest.
Ppea and asparagus sludge slightly different. Peas do not like fertilized soils, so they should be planted in the poorest and most inconvenient areas of your garden. This plant will grow well on marl soil or loam. Peat can be detrimental to peas.
This plant is cold-resistant, so it can be sown at the first warming. It can survive frosts down to -4 degrees, so it can be easily planted at the end of March - mid-April.
These wonderful vegetable crops will reward you with gratitude and productivity for proper care.
Comments
I love asparagus, but I've always found it difficult to care for. I'll have to try planting this plant in the spring.