Leeks: The Ultimate Winter Crop

leeks_winterharvesthandbook-Max-Quality

Looking for a veggie to grow and harvest through winter? Try leeks!

With some careful planning, a bit of elbow grease, and some insight from Eliot Coleman, you’ll enjoy leeks from your garden all year long.

The following is an excerpt fromThe Winter Harvest Handbook by Eliot Coleman. It has been adapted for the web.


What Are Leeks?

Leeks are almost a year-round crop for us and would be all-year if the winter leeks did not sell out so quickly.

We get our first crop in May from transplanting extra early seedlings to a cold house. (Seeds are sown February 15 in our plant-starting greenhouse.) Then we sell outdoor-grown summer leeks through September and the fall leeks through November.

Leeks In Every Season

Winter leeks are available from early December until we are sold out, usually in early March. We use a different leek variety for each season.

The summer and fall leeks are harvested directly from the field with the additional protection of a sheet of plastic over the last of the fall leeks during the second half of November.

We protect the winter leeks with a movable greenhouse starting in early December. We add an inner layer from mid-December on until all the leeks are sold.

Cooking & Eating Leeks

The edible part of a leek is the white blanched stem. The more length a blanched leek stem has, the better the product.

Blanching can be accomplished by hilling soil up against the stems of the leeks. However, in our experience, the key to growing leeks efficiently and intensively is to grow your own transplants and dibble them into deep planting holes.

By dibbling in the transplants rather than having to hill-up soil as the leeks grow, we are able to plant them more intensively—as closely as three rows on a 30-inch bed with the leeks 4 inches apart in the row.

Growing Leek Transplants

Unlike many of our other crops, we don’t grow our leek transplants in soil blocks.

Instead, we grow them on the floor in our plant-starting greenhouse in 30-inch-wide-by-8-foot-long-by-3- inch-deep seedbeds with wooden sides filled with potting soil.

We sow leek seeds directly into these beds using the six-row seeder. We allow the seedlings to grow in these beds until they are at least 10 inches tall.

We dig them out of the seedbed by loosening the potting soil under them with a trowel.

To prepare the young plants for transplanting, we trim their roots to 1 inch long and trim the top part to 10 inches long.

The Dibble Method

Our dibble is a 36-inch-long, 1-inch-diameter dowel with the end tapered to a spatulate tip.

We sometimes attach a shovel handle to the upper end of the dowel and add a 6-inch-diameter plate 9 inches above the tip.

In use, we push it into the soil to the full 9-inch depth and then twist the handle so the spatulate tip flattens out the bottom of a 9-inch-deep tubular hole.

Make Sure the Soil is Moist

This is more successful if the soil is moist, as dry soil will tend to collapse back into the hole when the dibble is removed. Thus, we water the surface before transplanting when conditions are dry.

We make a hole every four inches along the row and simply drop a leek transplant vertically into each hole.

Starting Leek Plants

Once the seedlings are in the holes, only an inch or so of green top sticks up above the soil. Then we irrigate the field and let the leeks grow.

We don’t intentionally refill the holes, but soil slowly migrates in every time we irrigate or cultivate.

The leek plants grow beautifully, each with a guaranteed nine inches of blanched shank. If you have never grown leeks this way before you may find it hard to believe that it will work—but it does.

Baby Leeks

Our restaurant customers love early baby leeks. These we grow in a cold greenhouse at five rows to a 30-inch bed, setting them 3 inches apart in the row.

At that spacing they can be cultivated with the long-handled wire weeder. Once when we had no other space, we planted single rows of leeks between the edge bed and the wall of the greenhouse.

The dibble-and-drop method is the only way we could have done that.


Recommended Reads

Low Tunnel Tutorial: Winter Growing DIY

The Search for A Welsh Leek

 

 

Read The Book

The Winter Harvest Handbook

Year Round Vegetable Production Using Deep-Organic Techniques and Unheated Greenhouses

$19.47

Enter your email to sign up for our newsletter and save 25% on your next order

Recent Articles

low tunnel

Low Tunnel Tutorial: Winter Growing DIY

Want to grow year-round, but a greenhouse feels like a big  investment? The low tunnel is here to help! Low tunnels are less expensive than greenhouses and allow you to adjust & respond to the climate outside the tunnel. When it comes to cost and flexibility, low tunnels are the all-around winners. The following is…

Read More

10 Books to Gift the Homesteader in Your Life

These days, there are a record number of people growing their own food and other crops at home. Whether the homesteader in your life is new to the homesteading lifestyle or a seasoned pro, we’ve got your go-to gifts for anyone who grows everything themselves. In the first edition of The Organic Medicinal Herb Farmer,…

Read More
wreath

How To Create A Homemade Wreath

From clipping the proper branches to tying the right knots, building a wreath takes patience and precision. Create this holiday craft with your family to decorate your home, or spread the joy to others by gifting or selling your homemade wreath. The following is an excerpt from Carving Out a Living on the Land by…

Read More
wintergreen

Wondrous Wintergreen: All About the Wintergreen Plant

Have you ever chewed on a piece of gum or used toothpaste and wondered where the minty taste comes from? It’s all in the wintergreen. Wintergreen, a vine that produces flavorful berries, is very easy to grow and harvest in your own garden or greenhouse. It is an unusual and beautiful evergreen groundcover plant that…

Read More
pruning

A Guide to Pruning Protected Crops

Pruning is essential for keeping protected crops healthy & balanced through the winter months. Keep reading for some helpful tips on pruning greenhouse and hoophouse plants! The following is an excerpt from The Greenhouse and Hoophouse Grower’s Handbook by Andrew Mefferd. It has been adapted for the web. Unless otherwise noted, all photographs copyright © 2017…

Read More