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Gardening

Grow your own

(123 Posts)
Whitewavemark2 Wed 23-Dec-20 13:53:49

Decided to start this thread with hope that a group of us can share information and comparison to see how much we can grow with in my case is a limited amount of space. I have two Trugs and pots of all sizes.

January.

I am preparing for the first week in January by getting the heated propagator up ready to use in the greenhouse.
Seeds to sow each type will be sown for my square feet gardening system.
1st week.
Sow calabrese, cabbage, leeks and parsley. In propagator.

3rd week
Sow cauliflower, more calabrese and cabbage. In propagator.

Whitewavemark2 Fri 08-Jan-21 12:51:06

Callistemon

Has anyone used the Planting by the Moon method?

www.allotment-garden.org/gardening-information/lunar-gardening-planting-phase-moon/

I have read about it for years now, but never followed it. Would be interested to hear if anyone thinks it brings good results.

Sowed parsley in propagator.

Daisymae Fri 08-Jan-21 15:12:31

Have heard about planting by the moon but really don't have the patience! I grew courgettes from seed for the first time last year. Only 8 in the packet but they all grew and were very successful in large plastic pots. I have ordered some golden ones and a quick growing green variety too.

Whitewavemark2 Fri 08-Jan-21 15:31:14

Daisymae

Have heard about planting by the moon but really don't have the patience! I grew courgettes from seed for the first time last year. Only 8 in the packet but they all grew and were very successful in large plastic pots. I have ordered some golden ones and a quick growing green variety too.

You must have had courgettes coming out of your ears?

Trisha57 Fri 08-Jan-21 15:36:47

Thanks Whitewavemark2 for the advice on leeks. I usually plant them round the perimeter of one raised bed and grow carrots in the middle, hoping to deter carrot fly! As I also put a high fence of fleecing round them all, it seems a bit extreme so I will give the leeks a couple of square feet instead and keep the carrots in another bed! Must go and sort through my seed packets.............

Daisymae Fri 08-Jan-21 17:46:36

Actually I did! I froze some, gave some away and had them with just about every meal. They were such BIG plants too.

Whitewavemark2 Mon 11-Jan-21 09:32:50

First seed of the vegetable year germinated???

It is Kabuki Broccoli.

Shropshirelass Mon 11-Jan-21 09:38:50

I am lucky to have plenty of space, however I was late planting some last year (elderly relatives took up all of my time). I have had some nice veggies but not many for the work put in! This year I will plant earlier and be ready to pick and enjoy. I did have a bumper crop of runner beans and courgettes last year though.

MamaCaz Mon 11-Jan-21 09:55:31

Jaxjacky

I order from Simply seeds, they’re inexpensive and reliable, that reminds me, need to get onion sets!

Thanks for mentioning Simply Seeds.

When a seed catalogue came last week, I went through it and listed what I wanted/needed, but then went online to look for better prices. Remembering your post, I checked out Simply Seeds and saved a fortune by ordering from them, and my order arrived really quickly.☺

Whitewavemark2 Mon 11-Jan-21 10:04:07

I have ordered all my seeds I think that I need for this year, but I will definitely look at Simply Seeds next time or if I need any I forgot.

I’ve never looked at them.

Casdon Thu 14-Jan-21 11:54:06

Not even under a cloche, Spring is definitely coming!

Whitewavemark2 Fri 15-Jan-21 09:54:27

I love, love, love rhubarb! I have tried unsuccessfully to grow it in a pot.

Today I’m going to sow a couple of aubergine seeds, lettuce, coriander and basil.

All the brassicas have germinated. Still waiting for the parsley.

The strawberry slips I planted just before Christmas appear to be all surviving. Won’t get much from them this year though.

Jaxjacky Fri 15-Jan-21 09:56:54

MamaCaz pleased it was helpful.

Casdon Fri 15-Jan-21 11:29:51

I got my rhubarb in the Wilko ‘poorly plants’ section about 10 years ago, it was 59p I think -it does well because it’s at the bottom of a bank - it’s big enough to supply my neighbours as well as us!

Does anybody else get stuff from the ‘poorly plants’ stands? I like a challenge, last summer I got a gooseberry bush for £1.50, hoping that will yield a few gooseberries for me this year, because for some reason they are one fruit the supermarkets never stock.

25Avalon Fri 15-Jan-21 11:44:38

I have been collecting new puppy and looking after her the past few days. She is finally asleep exhausted (as am I) so just seen this thread.

WWM2 I have a salad sprouter which I bought from T&M along with sprouting seeds such as mustard, Alfalfa, rape, beetroot, broccoli, fenugreek, mung beans etc. NHS recommend you only use seeds prepared for sprouting and not ordinary ones. You can use a glass jar but the sprouter has 3 layers.

One thing I have not tried is sprouting peas. You can use dried marrow fat peas and grow them in soil in a hanging basket. You then harvest the pea shoots for salad.

Whitewavemark2 Fri 15-Jan-21 12:28:14

Saw this on twitter ? for those of us who are laid back and chilled.

“My gardening jobs for January:

Keep off the allotment (too wet).
Keep off the garden (wildlife).
Don't sow any seeds (too early)
Plan for spring.
No rush.”

Whitewavemark2 Fri 15-Jan-21 12:28:55

Thanks avalon

Redhead56 Fri 15-Jan-21 12:42:50

My rhubarb is sprouting too my blackberry bush has come to life. But the soil is frozen so just planning at the moment.

Casdon Wed 27-Jan-21 20:04:01

If anybody hasn’t got their seeds yet, there’s an excellent deal with Kitchen Garden magazine for February -10 packets of Kings seeds - spring onions, radish, leeks, Nero kale, chilli peppers, globe carrots, parsnips, tomatoes, lettuce, cabbage - each pack retails for £1.40, and the magazine is £5.99, so a significant saving.

janeainsworth Wed 27-Jan-21 20:34:28

Has anyone grown Cavolo Nero?
I germinated some seeds last autumn, potted them on, planted them out and they have just sat there, taunting me it seems with their lack of growth.
Do they wait till spring before they spurt into action or have I just failed?
Fairly heavy clay soil.

Casdon Wed 27-Jan-21 20:42:51

I’ve never tried it before, but the seed packet says sow May to June, harvest September to February if that’s any help?

Whitewavemark2 Wed 27-Jan-21 20:47:12

janeainsworth

Has anyone grown Cavolo Nero?
I germinated some seeds last autumn, potted them on, planted them out and they have just sat there, taunting me it seems with their lack of growth.
Do they wait till spring before they spurt into action or have I just failed?
Fairly heavy clay soil.

Yes I reckon they will be ready for picking in April or May. I would feed them in Feb or Mch and hope for the best. I love it!
I’ve just fed my winter cabbages, I reckon they will be ready end Mch/Apl. I have 3 ? in my square foot garden but all looking really healthy.

I’ve sown 6 leeks have a dozen more to sow.

Just looked at the RHS grow your own app - it’s free and so good - things are definitely hotting up for February.

Going to sow some cut and come again salads in greenhouse - Unheated - at the weekend and hope for the best.

merlotgran Wed 27-Jan-21 20:50:36

I grow Cavolo Nero and we have light alkaline soil so I'm not sure about fairly heavy clay.

You won't get any more action from them now, janea. I find the best growth spurt is just before the cabbage white butterflies start to become a nuisance and they then have to be protected with netting. The stems grow after the first pickings in summer (I have to stake mine) and you get another harvest in the autumn right through to now when there's not much to rave about but I carry on until it's time to pull them out.

The early pickings are great for stir fries and the later, more robust leaves can take quite a bit of cooking. Great flavour!

janeainsworth Thu 28-Jan-21 14:50:24

Thanks WW and*Merlot*.

Whitewavemark2 Sat 30-Jan-21 09:12:58

????next door cat has opened the greenhouse door and completely dug up the lettuce seeds I sowed a couple of days ago.

I shall have to jam it shut with a bamboo cane after resowing

janeainsworth Sat 30-Jan-21 10:32:11

Oh no WW how annoying!
I have an elastic cord with hooks at both ends that hook into my green house door &’then round the end, to keep the door firmly shut.