Among the garden[1] plants which make their appearance most speedily above ground, are ocimum, blite, the turnip, and rocket; for they appear above the surface the third day after they are sown. Anise, again, comes up on the fourth day, the lettuce on the fifth, the radish on the sixth, the cucumber and the gourd on the seventh—the cucumber rather the first of the two—cresses and mustard on the fifth, beet on the sixth day in summer and the tenth in winter, orage on the eighth, onions on the nineteenth or twentieth, and scallions on the tenth or twelfth. Coriander, again, is more stubborn in its growth, cunila and wild marjoram do not appear till after the thirtieth day, and parsley comes up with the greatest difficulty of all, for at the very earliest it is forty days before it shows itself, and in most instances as much as fifty.
The age[2], too, of the seed is of some importance in this respect; for fresh seed comes up more rapidly in the case of the leek, the scallion, the cucumber, and the gourd, while in that of parsley, beet, cardamum, cunila, wild majoram, and coriander, seed that has been kept for some time is the best.
There is one remarkable circumstance[3] in connection with
the seed of beet; it does not all germinate in the first year, but
some of it in the second, and some in the third even; hence
it is that a considerable quantity of seed produces only a very
moderate crop. Some plants produce only in the year in which
they are set, and some, again, for successive years, parsley,
leeks, and scallions[4] for instance; indeed, these plants, when
once sown, retain their fertility, and produce for many years.
1. from, as well as the
day reckoned to.
2.
3.
4.