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Flax seeds - Linum usitatissimum - green manure

Linum usitatissimum

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Linum usitatissimum is an annual herbaceous plant, growing up to 60 cm (24in) to 1 m (3ft) tall with beautiful light blue flowers which can be grown as a green manure. Sow it on the vacant plots of the vegetable garden as a cover crop. This flax covers, enriches the soil and improves its structure. In addition to its improving qualities, it is a very useful nectar plant for pollinators. It is highly effective in clayey soil and for carbon input thanks to its fibrous stems. Sow in spring sowing and cut when flowering.
Ease of cultivation
Beginner
Height at maturity
70 cm
Spread at maturity
20 cm
Soil moisture
Moist soil
Sowing method
Direct sowing
Sowing period March to May
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A
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Flowering time June to August
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Description

Cultivated Flax, Linum usitatissimum in Latin, is an annual plant that can be used as green manure. Through its powerful root system, it loosens the soil, improves soil structure, limits the proliferation of weeds, and helps prevent soil leaching or compaction caused by rain. Sown in spring in March-April, this flax produces lots of typical, delicate blue flowers in the summer, creating a beautiful effect. It is effective in clayey soil thanks to its multiple rootlets that break up the soil.

Cultivated flax is native to temperate and subtropical regions of the northern hemisphere and belongs to the linaceae family. It is an annual plant that forms a cluster of slender stems covered with green-blue foliage, composed of very fine, 1 to 3 cm (0 to 1in) long, lanceolate leaves. When in bloom, flax forms bushy clumps that can reach up to 1m (3ft) high. Flowering occurs, depending on the region, in the form of corymbs of five-petaled, light blue flowers with a flared funnel shape from June to August. They form terminal panicles and are borne on an upright and elongated peduncle. They wither during the day. This plant readily self-seeds in light soil. Cultivated flax has carbon-rich stems that provide humus.

Green manures like cultivated flax have many benefits and are widely used in organic gardens. They nourish and improve the soil by providing it with various nutrients and stimulating the soil's microbial life. Their roots loosen, break up, and aerate the soil. The vegetative cover protects the soil from leaching (nutrient loss in sandy soil), rain compaction (crusting in loamy soil), and erosion (due to runoff on sloping terrain during heavy rainfall). This vegetative cover also helps suppress weed growth by preventing the growth of weeds. Finally, green manures are often nectar-rich and attract pollinators.

Green manures can be sown on uncultivated plots or between rows of vegetables. They are either naturally destroyed by frost or cut before seed formation. Once cut down, they can be left in place as mulch, or crushed and incorporated into the top layers of the soil, or collected and added to compost.

 

 

Harvest

Size of vegetable Medium

Plant habit

Height at maturity 70 cm
Spread at maturity 20 cm
Growth rate fast

Foliage

Foliage persistence Annual
Foliage colour medium green

Botanical data

Genus

Linum

Species

usitatissimum

Family

Linaceae

Origin

Western Europe

Annual / Perennial

Annual

Planting and care

Sow Linum usitatissimum directly in the vegetable garden from March (in warm regions) to May (in cold regions). It likes full sun. Sow in fine, light, well-drained and loose soil. Cover the seeds with 1 cm (0in) of fine soil or compost, then press down with the back of a rake then water. Thin out to leave only one plant every 10 cm (4in).

Linum is sown from March to May for flowering from June to September. It is very easy to grow.

With rapid growth, it can be mowed 8 to 10 weeks after sowing. But by leaving it in place longer, its roots can better develop to aerate the soil and its stem will become rich in carbon.

Seedlings

Sowing period March to May
Sowing method Direct sowing

Care

Soil moisture Tolerant

Intended location

Type of use Border
Hardiness Hardy down to -18°C (USDA zone 7a) Show map
Ease of cultivation Beginner
Soil well-drained
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Any
Soil type Silty-loamy (rich and light), 130

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