As far as I know, this is the first time I have tried growing Swedes. If I have grown them before it would have been a very long time ago (way before I started my blog), and it must have been unsuccessful, otherwise I would almost certainly have remembered it!
![](http://m5.paperblog.com/i/108/1087309/swede-ruby-L-H_injl.jpeg)
Swedes are cheap to buy in the shops, and occupy the ground for quite a long time so they have a low VSR (Value for Space Rating), and I wouldn't normally consider growing them, but this time I was determined to have my own "proper" Winter veg, and for me this has to include Swede! My Swede seeds (variety: Ruby") were sown on 10th May, and planted out into a raised bed as little seedlings on 7th June. I only had room for four of them. Here they are, protected by a forest of little sticks.
![](http://m5.paperblog.com/i/108/1087309/swede-ruby-L-ErpLMf.jpeg)
I was meticulous with watering during the Summer, and the Swedes seemed to grow reasonably well. After the Leeks growing alongside them suffered some damage at the hands (noses / paws, probably) of the foxes, I covered the whole bed with netting.
![](http://m5.paperblog.com/i/108/1087309/swede-ruby-L-1lY2XD.jpeg)
The netting didn't stop the slugs though, and despite the liberal application of slug-pellets, the Swedes suffered a fair bit of damage:
![](http://m5.paperblog.com/i/108/1087309/swede-ruby-L-h5N2Aw.jpeg)
I think the damage to their leaves may have inhibited their growth, because from about late September onwards, the Swedes grew painfully slowly. I waited patiently (and in vain) for them to swell up. One of the four was very peculiar and despite developing two "crowns" it has not produced any meaningful root:
![](http://m5.paperblog.com/i/108/1087309/swede-ruby-L-vtAE4o.jpeg)
Finally, this week I decided that it was time to harvest the first of the Swedes. Even though it still didn't look very big, I had concluded that it had stopped growing. Leaving it in the ground any longer would probably only lead to it going woody, so up it came:
![](http://m5.paperblog.com/i/108/1087309/swede-ruby-L-9NkIEl.jpeg)
I wouldn't say it was a fine specimen, by any stretch of the imagination, but I'm reasonably pleased with it, since it is my first attempt. Honour has been satisfied!
![](http://m5.paperblog.com/i/108/1087309/swede-ruby-L-w_kqL_.jpeg)
After I had trimmed off the elongated stalk I was left with 600g of useable veg (though of course that is before peeling it).
![](http://m5.paperblog.com/i/108/1087309/swede-ruby-L-fPopAE.jpeg)
This Swede is due to be eaten tomorrow, so I'll wait and see what it's like to eat before I decide whether to try again next year.
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P.S. Yesterday a couple of people said they thought that what I had described as slug damage on my Perpetual Spinach might actually have been caused by birds, so just to be on the safe side I have erected a defence mechanism around them, using flexible plastic Clematis Netting. It won't deter the small birds, but I reckon it will keep the pigeons off - and they are the most destructive type of bird:
![](http://m5.paperblog.com/i/108/1087309/swede-ruby-L-pg6tK0.jpeg)