Hello Gardeners, I’m Amanda McNulty with Clemson Extension and Making It Grow. Early wild types of cabbages grew in the warmer parts of Western Europe, including the Channel Islands. One in particular, the Jersey cabbage or Long Jacks, grows up to ten feet tall! To cultivate a straight stem, growers would strip the leaves off as they matured and use them as nutritious food for livestock, giving rise to another common name of cow cabbage. For a time, the stems were also used as a substitute for lumber in some cases, since the German’s cut much of the timber during their occupation, and for making walking sticks. In the early twentieth century, over 30,000 a year were exported. One family still makes these fascinating objects and you can get seed from them and grow them yourself. Pet or meat rabbits enjoy the leaves so you could kill two birds with one stone.
Jersey Cabbage
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