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  • Eager Novice and Newbie! Hello!

    Hi guys. Im totally new to gardening. Been buying the magazine at home and its so interesting and informative, however there is just so much to take in for someone who has only grown tomatoes in the past!!!
    I want to get stuck in and started but every time I look at seeds it seems I have missed the time to sow!

    Can anyone help! Whats good to get planting this time of year for a complete newbie! I know good things come to those who wait but is there anything I can plant now where I will see fruit or veg at the end of the season? (I want to get bottling and pickling)

    Also I live up on a very windy small holding in Cornwall and have yet to test the soil, so im thinking of just starting off small, in boxes and grow bags until I get more experience!

    Thanks guys, I'm really looking forward to getting stuck in!

  • #2
    Why don't you go out and buy veg plants?

    Most garden centres and even DIY shops will have a selection to be planted right now
    All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.

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    • #3
      What seeds are you too late to sow? Most of mine say March - June, and it's a late season this year so you have plenty of time.

      Boxes and growbags are OK I suppose, but most things would be better in the ground. Pots etc dry out very quickly.

      It's really not necessary to do a soil test before growing things - I never have.

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      • #4
        Hi Jenny - welcome and enjoy - I sowed seeds of peas, beetroot and carrots in my own plot on 24 April and all 3 are now showing. My daughter's plot has just been cleared so we will be sowing the above and others on her plot on Sunday 12 May.

        We got grandchildren's plot late last June and by late September were harvesting a small number of peas, carrots, beetroot, lettuce, and sweetcorn (from plants) so go ahead and try - seeds are cheap so you have nothing to lose - good luck
        Endeavour to have lived, so that when you die, even the undertaker will be sorry - Puddinghead Wilson's Diary

        Nutter by Nature

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        • #5
          Thanks guys. I certainly want to try from seeds. I want to put my own love into it.

          I may bypass the grow bag idea then 'rustylady' and just go for it in the soil. Next door as pigs and the have turffed up loads of soil, literally over the hedge from where i want to grow. I wonder if its worth using that soil as well? Ah so much to concur.

          TwoShed, i have thought about just going out and buying veg plants, but i feel that would be cheating :-)

          Sheneval I may just get my bum into gear and sow some this weekend. I was thinking peas and carrots first. Any advice on what bran of seeds?

          Thanks for all this guys, i was getting swamped with reading allotment books and lost my nerve on just getting out there and planting!

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          • #6
            Hello and welcome to the vine Jenny, you're right about there being lots of info out there but the easiest thing to do it to just get stuck in and sow a few seeds.
            Location....East Midlands.

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            • #7
              Hello, and welcome to the Madhouse!
              All the best - Glutton 4 Punishment
              Freelance shrub butcher and weed removal operative.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Jennyjen1984 View Post
                I was thinking peas and carrots first. Any advice on what bran of seeds?

                Thanks for all this guys, i was getting swamped with reading allotment books and lost my nerve on just getting out there and planting!
                Right, forget the books for a bit. I'm not saying don't read them, but if you spend all your time reading you will get confused and won't actually get any gardening done.

                Get outside and dig over a bit of ground. Go to your nearest shop that sells seeds and buy some. Peas are good, and fairly easy. Carrots not so easy. They don't like stony ground much, and they're better covered with fleece to keep the carrot flies off. You may still be able to get some "first early" seed potatoes. Spuds are really easy and first earlies will be ready to harvest 10 - 12 weeks after planting.

                What other veg do you like to eat?

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                • #9
                  Hi Jennyjen and welcome. You asked about fruit too. Its a bit late now to be planting fruit trees and bushes to get much of a crop this year, so you should be planning for next year. You may be able to buy strawberry plants still and they could give you some fruit this year, but 2nd year is better.
                  I haven't direct sown any veg seeds yet this year because of the weird weather. I start most of my seedlings off indoors anyway and you could be doing that too - on your windowsills. Beans, courgettes and squashes, plenty of things can be sown now.

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                  • #10
                    Hello and a very warm welcome to the Vine. As the others have already said, buy some seed or plants and go for it, it's the best way to learn how to do things and if you get stuck, just ask.
                    Granny on the Game in Sheffield

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                    • #11
                      Hi Jenny,

                      Welcome to the vine.

                      The best thing about mistakes in the veg garden is you can always eat the evidence
                      Quanti canicula ille in fenestra ?

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                      • #12
                        Awesome thank you!

                        I love all veg but im looking forward to growing Asparagus, Potatoes, Carrots. I like to make Jams so im very eger to get Strawberries, blackberries and maybe blue berries on the go to :-)

                        This sudden urge to garden has come from recently moving to a small holding. Im very excited :-)

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by out in the cold View Post
                          Hi Jenny,

                          Welcome to the vine.

                          The best thing about mistakes in the veg garden is you can always eat the evidence

                          ha i love this idea

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                          • #14
                            Jenny could you add your location to your profile please? Then it will show up on your posts (you can see that I am in Lowestoft).

                            I grew up on the edge of Dartmoor in Devon, so I know the Southwest well. There will be plenty of fruit for you to make jams with, even without managing to grow your own this year. Blackberries, plums and apples in the hedgerows, rosehips.

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                            • #15
                              Croeso i'r Vine.
                              "A life lived in fear is a life half lived."

                              PS. I just don't have enough time to say hello to everyone as they join so please take this as a delighted to see you here!

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