Quinoa grows in all kinds of soil, but prefers well composted and well drained conditions. The plants grow from four to six feet in height and prefer full sun.

Quinoa is a slow starting plant. In addition to the seeds being edible, the leaves make good additions to salads and cooked, much like spinach. Thinnings can be used in this manner rather than relegating them to the compost pile. Or you can pick young leaves as the plant grows.
Quinoa is a very low maintenance, drought resistant plant. Keeping weeds away allows them to grow larger. My problem was keeping the hungry land critters away. They enjoyed the tender leaves and stems so much, I ended up with only one plant reaching maturity.
Even with my critter problem, I considered my experiment a success. I didn't get enough to make a meal, but I did prove that quinoa can be grown on Powell Lake. This year I'll plant more and see if I can get more to survive. -- Margy
Good luck in growing more this year!
ReplyDeleteIsn't it nice when an experiment works and you get something edible from it. Have you planted this years' quinoa yet?
ReplyDeleteThey look attractive too!
ReplyDeleteDon't go on about quinoa! Hubby loathes it!
ReplyDeleteI've not tried it. Wary, I suppose.
ReplyDeleteROG, ABCW