Brinjal is a nutrient-dense vegetable with a long list of health advantages. It's low in calories and fats, and it's all water, with a little calcium, fiber, and carbohydrates thrown in for good measure. It contains many total water-soluble sugars, free reducing sugars, amide proteins, and a lot of minerals and vitamins. Brinjal has ayurvedic therapeutic properties and is helpful to people with diabetes. It's also been recommended as a treatment for people with liver issues. After sowing, brinjal seeds take one to two weeks to germinate. Since bag-grown seedlings do not damage the root system, they are ideal for field planting. After being transplanted, flowers typically bloom 40-45 days later. Breeding has aimed to create high-yielding, early, better-quality, and disease-resistant brinjal varieties. A fleshy berry that grows singly or in clusters, the fruit is juicy.
Common Name |
Brinjal, Egg plant |
Sunlight |
Full-Day in Sunlight |
Water |
Water on a regular basis |
Temperature |
Between 250 - 320 |
Soil |
Light Sandy to heavy clay |
Fertilizer |
Regular fertilizer |
Germination |
7 to 14 days |
Harvest Season |
120-130 days |
pH |
5.5 – 6.6 |
No. of seeds |
100+ |
Sowing should be performed in thin lines with a spacing of 5-7 cm between them. The seeds are usually planted at a depth of 2-3 cm, covered with a fine layer of soil, and lightly watered with a watering can. To maintain the necessary temperature and moisture, the beds should be covered with dry straw, grass, or sugarcane leaves. Watering should be done as needed with a watering can before germination is complete. After germination is complete, the cover of dry straw or grass is removed. The seedlings can be hardened by withdrawing water for the last week in the grow bags.
When the seedlings reach a height of 12-15 cm and have 3-to-4 leaves, they are ready for transplanting in 4-5 weeks. Withhold irrigation to harden the seedlings. Carefully uproot the seedlings without damaging the roots. Transplanting and irrigation can be performed in the evening hours. Press the soil firmly around the seedlings. The spacing is determined by the soil fertility, varieties, and the season's suitability.
The fruits are ready to select after 120-130 days of seed sowing, depending on the variety. The ripe fruits should be harvested as soon as they reach a suitable size and color. Fruits are harvested when their flesh becomes dry and tough and turns a purple tint. The maturity of the fruit can be determined by pressing the thumb against the side of the fruit. The fruit is too immature if the pressed part springs back to its original form. During harvesting, a part of the calyx and the stem end is left on the fruit. Since the fruits do not all mature simultaneously, they are harvested at 8-10 day intervals.
This a significant and dangerous insect pest of the brinjal plant. A short pinkish caterpillar consumes internal tissue from the terminal shoot and bores into the young fruit through the calyx. Infestation signs can be seen on the surface. The big holes that are commonly seen on fruits are caterpillar holes. Fruits infested with insects become unfit for consumption.
Any insect-affected portion should be clipped along with the insect and killed, as should any fruit with holes. The use of bio pest control for biting pests is greatly recommended.
The beetle and catch feed on the leaves and other tender parts of the eggplant, reducing the yield significantly.
If the infection is limited to a few plants, handpicking the eggs and larvae is the most effective control method. The use of bio pest control for biting pests is greatly recommended.
It is a severe disease that primarily affects brinjal seedlings in nursery beds. Seedlings infected with the disease rot at ground level, causing the plants to fall over. Patches of seedlings die.
Before sowing seeds, the seedbed should be handled with Formalin. Fungicides should be sprayed on seedlings in the nursery at regular intervals. The use of bio pest control is greatly recommended.
It is a severe brinjal disease. Above land, the fungus destroys all areas of the plants. On the stem, dark brown lesions appear, and round to oval spots appear on the leaves. Disease fruits have short, watery lesions that eventually turn black.
The treatments for this disease are disease-free crops, seed treatment with fungicide, and long crop rotation. Use of Trichoderma Viride or Pseudomonas Fluorescens biofertilizers is greatly recommended.
The affected plant develops a large number of tiny Yellow leaves but no fruit. The leafhopper spreads the disease.
The disease-affected plants should be killed, and the insect vector should be managed by spraying the crop with bio pest control is greatly recommended.
No. of Purple Round Brinjal Seeds - 100+