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growing sugar cane in yard. where do I buy?

Posted on 11/21/13 at 7:07 pm
Posted by CreoleGumbo
Faubourg Bayou St. John
Member since Sep 2003
1829 posts
Posted on 11/21/13 at 7:07 pm
where would i buy some cane to plant in the garden?
Posted by CT
Kate Upton's back
Member since Sep 2004
21054 posts
Posted on 11/21/13 at 7:11 pm to
Posted by LoneStarTiger
Lone Star State
Member since Aug 2004
15964 posts
Posted on 11/21/13 at 8:31 pm to
I'd like to plant some as well. Haven't shopped for it yet though
Posted by tigerdup07
Member since Dec 2007
21979 posts
Posted on 11/22/13 at 5:56 am to
Sugar cane is a three year crop. Be patient.
Posted by Cajun Revolution
Member since Apr 2009
44671 posts
Posted on 11/22/13 at 7:12 am to
Let me help you out here, what you seen grown in West Baton Rouge Parish and most of LA for that matter is a commercial hybrid variety of cane that's engineered for being ground. Basically all the sugar being drawn out. It's unnaturally hard and tough as shite. Do not try to chew it.

It's not your grandfather's Sugar Cane that would be cut up and served to kids to be sucked/chewed on.

What you want to buy is something called Blue Ribbon Sugar Cane if you can find it. Get some seedlings of that and grow a crop- will take at least two seasons- then you would have something. This is big fat stalks of cane that is naturally soft compared to the hybrid commercial cane that's grown now.
This post was edited on 11/22/13 at 7:17 am
Posted by DIGGY
Member since Nov 2012
1755 posts
Posted on 11/22/13 at 7:34 pm to
Drop by the LSU AgCenter Sugarcane Research Station in St. Gabriel and see if they can give you some. Cane is planted in late summer and is harvested the following fall. From this initial planting you usually get 3-4 fall harvest out of it. By that time disease, insects, weeds etc will lead to a reduced population over that time period and the crop is "busted out" and allowed to sit fallow through the following summer where weeds like johnsongrass are controlled or soybean is grown. The field is then replanted in late summer and the 3-4 year cycle starts again. You can plant the whole stalk at a rate of 4 stalks side by side with a 1/3 length overlap with the next set of 3-4 whole stalks lined before or behind it. Cover with approx 4-6 inches of soil. Or you can use pieces of the stalk called billets. If these are used, lay 6-8 billet pieces about 20-24 inches in length side by side and lay the next set of billets end to end with the ones before and after it. Cover with 3-4 inches of soil. The stalk has bumps along it called buds at the joints and that is where the new stalks will come up from.
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