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| Hia, I got some Okra seeds from the Organic Gardening Catalogue and some of them actually developped into plants. Though unfortunately only one of them survived, because the other I planted out into the rainy and windy allotment where they were unhappy, so the one and only survivor sits on my boyfriend's northern windowsill. It regularily shows off a flower or two, but we never actually got it to produce a proper Okra fruit. Now I wonder what we did wrong: - how big a pot does it need to have? it's in a pretty small pot at the moment. It only has 5 leaves so far. How do I get it less vulnerable with more leaves? - what fertiliser would it need? I have treated them as tomatoes so far. - so far we tried to get the flower to produce fruits, but so far without success. Any tips? Does the purple stuff need to go on the yellow or the other way round. Which tools do you use to fertilise it? - the flowers only appear for half a day or so. is that normal? - the plant is pretty long and unstable and intends to outgrow the windowsill. How would I get it a bit more bushy? What's the best location for it? I would at least want to get some more seeds of the plant, now that it exists. How long is the plants lifespan normally? Can I get it to survive longer than half a year? cherio Ulla |
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| i think they need heat to fruit, but may be proved wrong. i tried them a couple of years back in the garden but complete failure so never tried again
__________________ Kernow rag nevra http://www.cornishnotenglish.com/ The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits Albert Einstein Just be ordinary and nothing special. Eat your food, move your bowels, pass water and when your'e tired go and lie down. The ignorant will laugh at me, but the wise will understand Bruce Lee |
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| <SNIP> Okra is a very popular vegetables in subtropical Asia and Eastern Africa. Plants grow vigorously in warm climates and are very productive, producing 100 okras per plant. Upright plants grow beautiful yellow flowers and are also very popular for growing as decorative container plants. Flowers begin to form okra fruits in 4-6 days that should be picked for vegetable use when they are still young and tender. <END> This is from an Indian food site. I tihnk you'll need a hot house and sun lamps to grow it in Britain. ![]() |
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| Here in Spain I sow my okra off in January, they do need lots of heat and lots of room, so the larger the pot the better, I have huge plants up to my shoulders in the garden and I gave my friend a young plant (she didn't pot it on) and it stayed really small! I treat my okra mean and they thrive, so it's heat and space they need! try again next year.........PS is the variety called mammoth? I bought some too from the same company |
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