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Aubergine 'Patio Baby F1'

Eggplant

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Aubergine 'Patio Baby F1'

Eggplant
€2.95

Availability: In stock

Packet Size:10 Seeds
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Aubergine ‘F1 Patio Baby’ is a unique, high-yielding, compact variety that reliably produces flavoursome, oval fruits with beautiful glossy purple skins. Equally suited for growing in a container or in the garden, there is no staking required and the thorn-less leaves make them easy to harvest.

This early maturing variety performs well in difficult growing seasons. It has a wide harvest window, continuing to crop heavily throughout the season.
The compact plants grow to a height of around 30 to 40cm (12 to 16in) and a spread of 50cm (20in), they are ideal for growing in the greenhouse and are absolutely perfect grown in containers on the patio. Each plant can produce up to 25 to 50 deep purple to black egg shaped fruit and with a rich, mild sweet flavour, they are delicious baked, roasted or sautéed.
Best harvested when fruit first mature, typically when the size of an egg. Sow from January to April for harvesting from the end of July onwards.



Sowing: Sow January to April for growing early under glass or sow March to April for planting outdoors
Aubergines, also called eggplants due to the shape of earlier varieties, are essentially perennial plants. However, as they have no frost or cold tolerance and usually die in winter, they are cultivated as an annual, grown from seed every year in cooler regions.
Although they are related, they are much less cold hardy than tomatoes. If you plant your eggplants out before overnight low temperatures are consistently above 10°C (50°F), they will suffer from the chill, and they may never recover and bear fruit.
The aubergine plant is a lush, tropical plant that in a warm season can be very productive, especially under glass, outdoors they are sensitive to cold winds and heavy rain, and are best grown in large pots which can be moved under glass, if necessary.
Pinch out growing tips when 30cm (12in) high to encourage branching, and stop fruiting side shoots when five to six fruits have set.

Starting Indoors:
Seeds are typically started eight to ten weeks prior to the anticipated frost-free date. Soaking the seeds overnight may help germination.
Sow 6mm (¼in) deep into 9cm pots containing a moist seed compost and cover with just a fine sprinkling of compost or vermiculite (do not exclude light as this helps germination)
Place in a propagator or warm place, and keep at a constant temperature of 20 to 25°C (68 to 77°F). Keep the surface of the compost moist but not waterlogged; germination will take between 8 to 21 days. Transplant seedlings carefully while quite small into 15cm (5in) pots and grow on at 18 to 21°C (65 to 70°F).

For Outdoor Crops:
Acclimatise plants to outdoor conditions for 10 to 15 days. Plant out into sheltered site when all risk of frost has passed and the soil is warm. Plant 45cm (18in) apart in rows 90 to 120cm (3 to 4ft) apart. Aubergines grow well outside, but need gradual acclimatising to the more varied conditions.
A brilliant tip for this: enclose a block of plants, spaced about 60cm (2ft) apart in each direction, within a box of straw bales. These provide a brilliantly cheap but effective windbreak. If a cold night is forecast, simply drape fleece over the bales and anchor it with bricks.

For Greenhouse Crops:
Grow as above, but transplant into in 20cm (8in) pots or growing bags.


Cultivation:
Stake as you would for tomatoes. Provide plenty of water, especially in dry weather.
Black plastic mulch is helps to warm the soil, prevent weeds and conserve moisture.
Feed every 14 days with high potash (tomato) fertiliser once the first fruits have set. Cease feeding when fruits are fully formed. Mist the foliage regularly with tepid water to discourage red spider mite and to help flower set.
The flowers are relatively unattractive to bees and the first blossoms often do not set fruit. Hand pollination will improve the set of the first blossoms. Tap flowers daily to assist pollination. Remove the main tip/growing point when plants are 30cm (12in) high.


Harvest: 75 days to harvest
First harvests can be made from the early sowings from July onwards. Harvest at their desired size, while fruits are still shiny and young but not too firm to the touch. Fruits are typically cut from the vine just above the calyx owing to the semi-woody stems.
Pick regularly or plants will need further support to support the weight of the fruit.
Pick fruits before the skin loses its gloss, a symptom of over-ripeness but keep in mind that the fruits need to continue growing far past market maturity if you want to save seeds.


Storage:
Eggplant fruits can be stored for about four days in a cool room or a week in the refrigerator. Freezing is the best method for longer home preservation, blanched and frozen eggplant will keep for six months.


Info:
The aubergine has become popular with our more adventurous changes in diet and although we think of aubergines as being a vegetable they are technically a fruit. This is because the aubergine we eat is the ripened ovary of the flower.
Other fruits disguised as vegetables include the tomato, peppers, courgette and closely related to the courgette, the cucumber, pumpkin and squash.


Additional Information

Additional Information

Packet Size 10 Seeds
Common Name Eggplant
Other Common Names Apple of Love, Poor Man's Caviar
Other Language Names Brinjal, Melongene, Guinea Squash
Family Solanaceae
Genus Solanum
Species melongena
Cultivar Patio Baby
Hardiness Tender Perennial often used as an Annual
Height 40 to 50cm (16 to 20in)
Spread 50cm (20cm)
Spacing Outdoors: Plant 45cm (18in) apart in rows 90 to 120cm (3 to 4ft) apart.
Greenhouse: Transplant into in 20cm (8in) pots or growing bags.
Position Full Sun
Time to Sow January to April for growing under glass or March to April for planting outdoors
Germination 8 to 21 days at 20 to 25°C (68 to 77°F)
Harvest Harvest at their desired size, but while fruits are still shiny and young.
Time to Harvest 78 Days
Notes Cultivated as an Annual

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