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Comfrey 'Bocking 14' 3pcs Root Cuttings (Symphytum x uplandicum)
165 SEK
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165 SEK
Unit price per3 root cuttings of different lengths and thicknesses, 3+ cm - taken from a perennial mother plant of the variety 'Bocking 14'
Root cuttings from comfrey establish themselves with ease.
Place the root cuttings in soil and cover with a 1-2 cm thick layer of soil. Suitable for planting both in pots and in open ground. Make sure to keep the soil moist. It is best to keep the root cuttings in partial shade until they have sprouted their first shoots; after that, you can move the comfrey to its final growing place, which has no special demands. It can take up to 2 months for root cuttings to produce their first shoots, but usually they appear already after 2-3 weeks. If you raise your plants indoors or in a greenhouse, it will be faster.
'Bocking 14' is a sterile variety, which means it does not have the ability to produce and spread by seed. Propagation occurs only underground. This means that 'Bocking 14' together with 'Bocking 4' and others are not classified as invasive.
Common name: Comfrey 'Bocking 14'
Scientific name: Symphytum x uplandicum
Family: Boraginaceae
History & use:
Comfrey has historically been a well-used plant in the treatment of various ailments. But above all, it is a very effective accumulator of nutrients, thus a good soil improver. Comfrey grows quickly and its roots are deep-reaching, giving the plant access to nutrients from deeper soil layers that are otherwise inaccessible to most plants. It is mainly minerals such as potassium and calcium that are stored in the leaves, but also magnesium, iron, phosphorus, manganese, and others.
The leaves of comfrey can be cut down during the year and used as mulch, or alternatively dug into the soil, to make the nutrients available to other plants. Comfrey leaves are well suited as fertilizer for fruit trees and berry bushes thanks to their content of potassium and phosphorus.
Comfrey has a long growing season, from early winter to late autumn.
If the leaves are not cut down before winter, they wither and similarly provide a nutrient boost to the soil they grow on. New leaves begin to grow on the plant immediately after the snow melts.
You can also make your own fertilizer water from comfrey by filling a container with the leaves and then filling it with water to the brim. Let it stand for a couple of days and then mix the fertilizer water with 10 parts water to water the plants with.
Effective as an edge plant by manure heaps to prevent nutrient leakage, but also as an edge plant around crops and other places where you do not want weed roots to spread. Comfrey’s dense root system becomes like an underground wall, making it difficult for other roots to get through.
Comfrey creates an attractive environment for other plants in the cultivation – whether it is to attract pollinators or to serve as a natural fertilizer.
Cultivation:
Comfrey is a herbaceous perennial. It thus remains in place even after the leaves have withered during winter.
It is an incredibly easy-care plant and is tolerant in choice of growing place. It can grow in shade as well as wet soils and is therefore an effective component in flooded and waterlogged soils.
It also thrives well in drier soils in sunny places, although it prefers a somewhat moist environment.
Characteristics:
Longevity: Perennial
Light: shade/partial shade/sun
Height: 50-180 cm
Hardiness zone: 1-6
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