With asparagus you want many long and fat dense spears that are not fibrous, when they start to become thinner you stop harvesting for the year. It is common advice to remove/kill all female plants as the males are said to provide larger yields of fatter, longer, and better quality spears. It is common advice that female asparagus produce thin spears so can be weeded out early.
But is this really true? I have never met anyone who has tested this theory, have you?
I also had a female purple asparagus plant that used to grow the fattest and most succulent spears I have ever seen. Perhaps that is a variety trait and male plants of the same variety would be even better?
I wanted to do a comparison to see if this is the case, but I lack the necessary resources to run a trial properly. As I could not run this trial to get this information myself I looked up some peer reviewed papers, and the results were really surprising.
I found a few papers published in 1909 saying that all male asparagus fields provide higher yields than mixed fields. After reading though the methods it sounds like the mixed fields had issues with competition (from seedlings) rather than being a direct comparison between male asparagus and female asparagus plants. Again this is useful for commercial growers, but not all that useful for home growers with small numbers of plants.
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| Purple asparagus |
I will provide the full abstract of one of these papers, and then use sentences from others to highlight the findings.
"The results of this study show that the female plants had a significantly higher rootstock weight, weight per spear per plant, and weight per early spear per plant, whereas the male plants had a significantly higher total spear number per plant, early spear number per plant, and significantly fewer days to first harvest".
Another paper said:
“With the average stalk diameter there was no difference between male and female plants in 1964; in the first two years the diameter of the female plants was larger than that of the male”.
Yet another paper stated:
“Female plants had higher stalks and longer length to primary branch than male plants”.
Another paper states:
“…highest number of very thick spears appears generally in female plants”.
If anything these papers demonstrate that female asparagus plants often produce fatter, longer, better quality spears while males tend to produce more spears that are shorter, thinner, and of poorer quality.
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| Female asparagus producing berries |
Male asparagus plants flower and then the flower falls off, female asparagus plants flower and produce little red fruits that are filled with seeds. In time the female asparagus plants drop their fruit, the seeds eventually germinate and the bed gets choked with too many plants, leading to a reduction in quantity and quality of yield. Sometimes birds eat the berries and deposit the seeds in concentrated places causing a bit of a weed issue.
For a commercial grower with acres of asparagus this would be devastating and costly/difficult to overcome. Spraying a pre-emergent herbicide to prevent seedlings from growing sounds like extra time and money being spent, growing only male plants would be better in this situation.
In a commercial scale, producing many thin spears often results in higher profits than growing fatter, longer, higher quality spears. Remember that people in cities need to eat, and commercial agriculture must focus on profits and feeding landless people. If they didn't we would have massive famines in the city. Commercial agriculture must focus on producing large quantities of food that people can afford, often this is done at the expense of quality.
Commercial asparagus growers tend to want thin spears. I have even seen certain asparagus varieties described as having thick spears, and then recommending planting closer than normal so they will produce thinner spears.
When growing food in the back yard can focus on quality. Quantity is nice, but when home grown it comes second to producing high quality food.
According to the literature above, female plants often produce longer, fatter spears of higher quality. These are exactly the traits that I want when growing asparagus!
If you are growing food at home you may as well grow the best. I am not growing asparagus to sell the spears, I am growing to eat them. So if the choice I have to make is either more spears that are thin and low quality, or less spears if they are fatter and of superior quality, I will choose the latter every time.
Commercial Asparagus Growers Vs Home Growers
Research often focuses on maximising commercial yields, where producing more marketable spears can improve profitability. Home gardeners, however, may value different things, such as larger spears, preserving older varieties, tastier varieties, or simply enjoying a productive asparagus bed. For that reason, I don't think female plants should automatically be removed from every home garden
| Factor | Commercial Growers | Home Gardeners |
|---|---|---|
| Main goal | Maximum yield and profit | Fresh, high-quality asparagus for the family |
| Preferred plants | Mostly male hybrids | Male, female, or a mixture |
| Number of spears | Higher spear production is preferred | Less important than overall eating quality |
| Spear size | Uniform spears are preferred for sale | Larger spears may be preferred, even if fewer are produced |
| Seed production | Undesirable because it creates volunteer seedlings | Usually easy to manage by removing berries or unwanted seedlings |
| Maintenance | Reducing labour saves money | A little extra maintenance is rarely a problem |
| Plant breeding | Modern all-male hybrids are common | Older varieties and mixed plantings work well |
| Best choice | All-male varieties often make the most economic sense. | Choose the plants that best suit your garden and priorities. |
Frequently Asked Questions
Are female asparagus plants worth keeping?
Yes, for many home gardeners they are. Although male plants often produce more spears, female plants often produce larger, heavier, more succulent spears depending on the variety and growing conditions.
Why do commercial growers prefer male asparagus?
Female plants produce berries and seedlings, increasing maintenance, while all-male hybrids often maximise marketable spear production.
Can I grow both male and female asparagus?
Absolutely.
Many home gardeners do exactly that.
Final Thoughts
Now that I know more about the quality of female asparagus plants, and why we are told to remove female asparagus plants, I plan to get some seeds of a few heirloom varieties to grow them out and offer year old crowns for sale.
Keep an eye on my for sale page I often have a few crowns of heirloom asparagus varieties for sale, and regularly have purple asparagus seed.





Thanks for this.Very interesting. I've been wondering about this male and female advice for some time. Personally I don't mind whether the spears are thick or thin, if the latter I have them raw in salads. I have one large raised bed of plants so it's easy to spot and weed out the babies. By the way, my ferns didn't start to die back this year until we had a good fall of snow last week.I stopped harvesting soon after Christmas, though. Fran (raining in Oberon!!)
ReplyDeleteHi Fran,
DeleteI will likely never have the space/time to do any trials myself, so I spent some time reading published research.
I prefer fat spears, but thin ones are good too.
I have been told that thin spears are tougher/more fibrous than fat spears. Apparently the outer skin is where all the touch parts are and the inner is soft, fat and thin have similar amounts of tough skin but fat ones have more of the soft core. I haven't looked into this yet so can't be certain if it is true.
I have started to wonder if work could be done to produce sterile triploid asparagus varieties. There are already tetraploid varieties and diploid varieties, so producing triploid seed should be simple enough. That way female plants could be grown but not have the risk of dropping seed and becoming a weed. I need to look into this more as sterile female plants sound ideal for home growers as there is no need to weed out the babies.
I love Oberon, it is very pretty there!
Thank you for this research! I really appreciate it. I grew asparagus from seed that was supposed to be male seed, but there are plenty of female plants and I was wondering whether it's worth it to remove the females. I'm so reassured to know it's fine to leave them. I don't have very much volunteer asparagus weed problem because I mulch the bed deeply. Then whenever I see an occasional thread-thin stalk I assume it's a seedling and pull it off. I try to pull off the berries but never catch them all, of course.
ReplyDeleteYay for thick yummy asparagus spears and not bothering about sexing the bed! Thank you!!!!
ncie post buddy
ReplyDeleteGood post
ReplyDeleteCool
ReplyDeleteIs there any difference in taste between male and female spears ?
ReplyDelete