Coming along nicely in my greenhouse but when is the earliest I should plant these in the ground?
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Sweet Peas
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Sweet peas are hardy, so they cope with cold weather OK. That said, they've lived all their lives in a nice warm(ish) gh with no wind to contend with, so harden them off for a week or so until they go out for good.
Mine are still a bit weedy, so they'll stay in my cold gh for another month I reckon.
Make sure you nip the tops out too, to encourage bushy growth and more flowers.All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
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I started my sweet peas in pots and transplanted them shortly after they had their true leaves. They transplanted well but stalled for a bit and are now just taking off. I still have a batch of others in pots that were planted the same time and still waiting to be transplanted. They are far more healthy looking and bushier than the ones I transplanted. Perhaps because they have been babied.
Just take care when transplanting and if you have slugs in your area protect your transplants as soon as they're in their new spot. Keeping them in the whiskey barrel and adding something for them to climb would probably be the best idea.
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what do people plant them in? I have a couple of rustic stone planters in the front garden but they're only about 5-10cm deep and I don't know if they'll need deeper roots. I've got Old Spice Grandiflora.
(I know nothing about flower gardening, got them as freebie seeds or I wouldn't be bothering to grow them )
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Sweet Peas
I grow mine in toilet roll cores and I can put 6 in a (large) Stork margarine tub. (Other margarines in plastic tubs are available - ) Then they live on west-south-west facing window ledges. I then harden them off in the garden under bottom-cut-upturned pop bottles. So far, its worked alright for me. I do a lot of my other veggies that way as well.....good if its something you don't want to disturb the roots of.There's pleasure sure in being mad that only madmen know - Anon
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I start mine off in root trainers then transplant them into open ground where they share wigwams with French beans at the lottie. I also have some perenial ones growing up an obilisk in the garden, must go and check those as am guessing they'll need tying in soon as it's been so mild.
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
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