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Eggpplant Florida High Bush

Eggpplant Florida High Bush

SKU: 628451361343
C$5.50Price

It is a pear-shaped black-purple eggplant. The fruits are high quality. The plant is vigorous, straight and branched.  Variety hybridized for the high quality of its fruits around 1900. It was the standard for sale in shops. Continuous production throughout the season. Resistance to disease and drought.

Only 5 left in stock
  • Technical sheet

    Latin name Solanum melongena
    Type Fruit
    place of culture Balcony/Terrace/Garden
    Growth Type Annual
    Exposure Sun
    Height 90cm

    Spacing

    50-60cm
    Germination 12 - 21 days
    Sowing March indoors Seeds need a temperature above 25°C to germinate.
    Harvest 75-85 days after transplant

     

  • Successful sowing

    Sowing: in a bucket of fine sowing compost in March/April on a warm layer (25°C constant) indoors or in a heated greenhouse. Cover the seeds with a few mm of seed compost then tamp down. Place your buckets near a window. 
    Water the surface lightly if the soil dries out. 

  • Plant

    Transplanting young plants measuring 15 cm in the ground after the risk of frost has disappeared,  in a fresh, deep and humus-rich soil with a warm and sunny exposure at 50 cm in all directions. 
    Hoe, weed and ridge the eggplant plants. Water the feet regularly.  Mulch. 

  • enemies

    Mildew: will cause gray-green spots to appear on the leaves, while the underside will be covered with white felt. 
    In preventive action, hoeing and watering with nettle manure and horsetail tea. Before the plant flowers, or as soon as the first symptoms appear, it is also possible to treat with Bordeaux mixture.

    Red spiders: the leaves are first covered with gray spots before taking on a tanned appearance, then drying out and falling. They weave webs on the leaves. 
    Cut the aerial parts and burn them. Treatment by spraying black soap or nettle manure can then be considered. A plant insecticide (Anti-Aphids based on Pyrethrum) can also be used.

    Colorado potato beetles: pick them up by hand. 

    Aphids: attack leaves, buds and stems. 
    Spray a solution based on black soap or nettle manure. A biological plant insecticide, such as a Pyrethrum-based Anti-Aphids, can be used in the event of a major attack.

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