Tips for Transplanting Asparagus

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by Adobestock/barmalini

Learn to prolong the life of your overcrowded asparagus patch by transplanting asparagus using these tips to ease the process of transplanting.

There’s one good reason for not transplanting asparagus: It’s a lot of work! However, it’s also the only way to get full production in the first spring following planting.

My original asparagus patch, for example, was started with two-year-old commercial plants. But five years later, I transplanted some ten-year-old crowns from a neighbor’s garden, and when spring rolled around, these transplants–in spite of having been recently moved–actually outproduced the younger (seven years old), established plants. What’s more, they were free for the digging.

But (naturally!) there is one catch: If you don’t know just how to handle the scavenged plants, your only reward will be improved muscle tone from all the additional gardening exercise. And should you consult the “experts” for advice, most of them will simply tell you that it’s easier to buy new plants.

Well, of course it’s easier, but you may have more energy than money, you may not want to wait several years for the payoff, or your present patch may have become overcrowded and so unproductive that it won’t satisfy your family’s appetite for this delicious, healthful spring crop. (Just 100 grams of asparagus contains 2.2 grams of protein and at least 900 units of vitamin A and beta carotene, a component that many people feel has great potential as a cancer preventive.)

  • Updated on Feb 22, 2023
  • Originally Published on Sep 1, 1983
Tagged with: asparagus, transplanting
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