Crambe maritima
I'm beyond excited that my Crambe or Sea Kale root cuttings sprouted!!
A 'formerly common denizen of single banks' in N Europe and the British isles,sea kale is a delightful perennial wonder!
In Living in a Wild Garden, British author Roger Banks wrote, 'there are still odd clumps of it, .... at first you think you are looking at a distant line of breakers till you realize that it is neither rough enough for such a sea to be running nor can you hear it...
'Then through binoculars, you see that your breaking line of surf is still - still as the great wave of Hokusai's picture - and that the lace-like foam flung up on its rearing green crest is as dry as the 17th century master's woodcut. ... you realize you are witnessing the flowering of SeaKale, Crambe maritima. If only people wanted to lift up their hearts, there would be special excursions to see such a miracle and of only they cared for their palettes, there would be a local cottage industry cultivating it...'
- Like other Perennial vegetables, Crambe's strong root system gives these lovely kale relatives access to deep minerals.
Their seeds have a corky coating, which allows them to float off and inhabit new shores!
In the past, I've tried growing from seed a few times, then read that root and stem cuttings are much easier to start, and was able to get a few pieces of root last fall. There is an old population near a lighthouse on our coast, and these were exposed and so likely to break off in stormy weather and high tides.
I simply tucked them in gallon pots of potting soil, putting a piece of garden fleece over each pot to keep slugs and other visitors out, and left then on my front porch over the winter.
I was so excited to see each of the three cuttings beginning to leaf out. There was a nice root on the piece I just planted, and I'll give one to a friend who first introduced me to this long lived denizen of shingle banks!!
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