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Growing Celery

November 1, 2011

Celery growing in the ground.Celery can be grown in just about any climate as long as you have the time and patience. Traditional trench-grown celery, which requires specific soil conditions and constant attention over a long growing season, has given this vegetable its demanding reputation. However, many of today's celery varieties are self-blanching and therefore much less labor-intensive and easier to grow.

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Site and Soil

Celery was developed from a wild marsh plant, so if you have wet soil or a high water table, you are probably looking at the ideal growing conditions. If you don't have wet soil you can still grow it, you just need to keep the soil evenly moist (not soggy) all season. Celery also grows in partial shade (with at least a half day of sun) and doesn't need a lot of space. A row 8 feet long will provide enough space to grow at least a dozen bunches of celery.

Celery is one of the heaviest feeders in the vegetable garden. It needs very rich soil. It is an equally voracious drinker. Prepare the site by spreading a 4 inch layer of well-rotted manure or compost over the soil and dig it in well to a depth of 6 to 8 inches. If your soil is heavy with clay, build raised beds or amend the soil by adding generous amounts of sand and compost.

Planting

Celery takes a long time to grow ( 80 to 120 from seed to maturity), so if given the choice, it is easier to buy seedlings than to grow it from seed. Unfortunately, bedding plants are not always easy to come by-especially if you are hoping to find a wide range of varieties.

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The seeds are tiny, take about two weeks to germinate, and are fussy about light, warmth, and, moisture. For a late-summer crop, sow them indoors 8 to 10 weeks before the last average frost date; for a fall crop, sow outdoors in May or June in a cool, shady part of the garden. Start seeds in flats or individual peat pots filled with a sterile seed-starting medium, barely covering them with a thin layer of sand (they need some light to germinate). Provide them with good drainage, but keep the soil moist. Keep flats out of direct sunlight, where soil temperatures in a place where soil temperatures will stay between 55 F (night) and 70 F (day). Once plants emerge, keep daytime temperatures between 65 and 75 F and nighttime temperatures between 60 and 65 F.

When plants reach 4 inches tall, move them to individual pots, or use a scissors to thin them to one plant per pot. Harden off and transplant to the garden after the last frost, when temperatures remain consistently above 45 F. Space plants 6 to 8 inches apart with the crowns set in a bit below soil level and spread 4 to 8 inches of organic mulch around the plants. If you plan to blanch them the traditional way, set the plants into a deep trench and continue to fill the trench with soil, covering the stalks as they grow.

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Care and Feeding

Keep the soil evenly moist throughout the growing season. Even if you enriched the soil, give each seedling a 1/2 strength liquid organic fertilizer on planting, and continue to fertilize every two weeks or so until they reach 8 inches tall. Keep the beds free of weeds, as celery plants will not tolerate competition.

If temperatures start to drop below 50 F protect young plants by covering them with floating row covers or cloches. Unlike most plants that bolt during the heat, it's exposure to cold that causes celery to flower prematurely.

Blanching

Celery stalks that have been blanched (blocked from light) are tender and taste sweeter, although their pale color signals the loss of certain vitamins. If you prefer the taste, there are several self-blanching varieties available, or you can blanch the stalks yourself using one of the following methods:

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Pests and Diseases

Providing you started with good seeds (or plants) and good soil, celery should stay resistant to most disease. Fungal diseases like "early blight" and "late blight" can usually be avoided through good cultivation practices. Caterpillars of the black swallowtail butterfly sometimes frequent celery plants. After they shed, these caterpillars sometimes have a coloring similar to monarch caterpillars (black, white, and yellow).

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They can be picked off by hand, but consider sparing them, as having some beautiful swallowtail butterflies flitter around the garden would be well worth the price of losing a few plants.

How to Harvest

When the plant looks like a mature bunch of celery, cut stalks from the outside of the plant as you need them, or cut whole plants free using a sharp spade just below the soil. You can prolong your harvest past the first frosts in the fall by mulching heavily with straw.

Read More Comments

April 20, 2014

In Ellen's article about growing celery, it talks about blanching. It sounds like staking or supporting. Is that correct? If not, what is it and what is the purpose? Why is it not called staking? Thank you.

By Syrenna

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May 2, 20140 found this helpful

It's not called staking, because it isn't staking. Blanching means covering the vegetable, or parts of it, from sunlight. This keeps it a lighter color and usually more tender and sweeter. It traditionally is done by covering the plant with something (mulch, cartons, etc), tieing the leaves over the head (cauliflower), covering with mounded dirt (leeks, asparagus), etc.

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Since the plant won't get as much light, total photosynthesis won't take place, and there will be a loss of some vitamins; light veggies are rarer and a delicacy.

 
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May 21, 2012

Do we need to stake celery up once it begins to grow?

By Flo

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January 9, 20140 found this helpful

Nope. You don't need to stake it up as the celery itself is hard, but if you really want to you could so you can make it more tender and juicier!

 
January 9, 20140 found this helpful

No.

 
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