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  • Seeds I'll never try to grow again

    After many years of trying to grow sweetcorn, this year was the last time. One kernel on a cob, that's all, two cobs on a plant, both equally pathetic. Even the chooks turned their beaks up at them.

    Second, Rosella, tomato. Lovely taste, very productive but..................split too easily, fall off the vine as soon as you look at them and make a splatty mess in the GH. Next year, there's be hundreds of self seeded Rosellas coming back to haunt me.

    Is there anything you'll never grow again?

  • #2
    Nothing that is in the never pile yet, but with limited space the not until I get more growing space list is growing by the season.

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    • #3
      The one thing I will never grow again is asparagus planted about 10 roots but after giving them 3 years I never got a decent return from them, I pulled the stems out last year leaving the roots to rot away, this year after planting out onion sets I started to get asparagus shoots coming through but I just removed them and hopefully thats the gone
      One other thing I am going to try and avoid sowing is F1 seeds though that not a definite
      it may be a struggle to reach the top, but once your over the hill your problems start.

      Member of the Nutters Club but I think I am just there to make up the numbers

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      • #4
        Never again
        Like you VC, sweet corn. This year was a one off, just to try it. It was quite successful but not my favourite veg. Also it takes up a lot of space for little return.
        Cucamelon ( enough said)
        Plum granny melon ( smells amazing, tastes flipping horrible! )
        Sweet dumpling squash ( second year no crop )
        Turks turban squash ( better than last year, but still only one and not fully formed fruit )
        Chilli spike & cayennetta ( both a real pain in the butt to harvest )
        Several tomato varieties that I can't remember off the top of my head. ( mostly down to flavour or low production).
        I might add more later.

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        • #5
          Nothing in the never pile yet, but will not grow more than a couple of summer squash each year (due to triffid like growth habit and more than we can eat).
          Butternut squash have failed me two years running, take up loads of space and no harvest from 12 plants so far. Planning to try a deep muck heap next year - their last chance!

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          • #6
            Can’t be bothered growing herbs from seed apart from basil. Lots of work with no real success so have just bought plants and put them in the ground which worked fine.

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            • #7
              Radishes. They won't grow, won't swell, go tough and hot and/or the slugs eat them. I don't even like the damn things!
              Chard/spinach beet. The chard I tried to grow was eaten to death by dot moth caterpillars (in winter). The bits I ate I didn't like at all. Spinach beet grew very well, but having harvested several armfuls of tough, leathery leaves (even the small ones), I decided never again. People say it tastes like spinach - not to me, it doesn't.
              Fuchsia berry - supposedly nice, fleshy berries tasting like a cross between a kiwi fruit and a fig. The reality was small berries full of tiny gritty seeds. The flavour was pleasant enough, the texture was horrible. Big plants for a fairly small crop.
              Mangetout/Sugar peas - always sound like a good idea, but they are ready at the same time as proper peas, and I just don't like them as much, so they get wasted.
              Runner bean Hestia - pretty dwarf plants with red and white flowers. Unspeakably awful beans.
              A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAP. - Leonard Nimoy

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              • #8
                The bulb fennel has failed again, that's 3 years now and no crop at all, tried planting early, late, under glass and outside. A few tomatoes that didn't impress, Red Cherry, Sungold were disappointing, both on taste and same as you VC, splitting and suicidal tendencies diving off the vine, back to Ailsa Craig maybe tumbling toms again.

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                • #9
                  The seeds of despair, discord and anarchy. Who am I kidding - there's a team meeting soon and I've plenty of all three.

                  I don't know if there's a never again - even the stuff I've not had success with (swede, khol rahbi, carrots) aren't on a never list but more in the If there's space list.

                  I might have moved sweetcorn into this list as it takes a bed up for a long time usually for not much return but this year I've had a great success (even though only about half of the kernels sprouted) and instead of eating corn on the cob I've stored it as sweetcorn kernels.

                  Yacon might be on the list - mostly because it looks like the plants won't do much this year including producing propagation rhizomes. If it does make some then I'll keep a couple of plants hanging around just in case.

                  New all singing all dancing blog - Jasons Jungle

                  �I have not failed 1,000 times. I have successfully discovered 1,000 ways to NOT make a light bulb."
                  ― Thomas A. Edison

                  �Negative results are just what I want. They�re just as valuable to me as positive results. I can never find the thing that does the job best until I find the ones that don�t.�
                  ― Thomas A. Edison

                  - I must be a Nutter,VC says so -

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                  • #10
                    I forgot to add aubergines. I actually bought plants, not seeds, but it made no difference. 3 attempts in the greenhouse yielded a total of one golf ball sized fruit. I'm not keen on aubergines anyway.
                    A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAP. - Leonard Nimoy

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                    • #11
                      Celeriac - pointless, foul tasting and really, really difficult to get even enough to truly taste the unpleasantness
                      Cucamelon - ?????? Really? Nope.
                      Melons - not really suited to the cool damp NW - would love one day to get just a small one.
                      Onions - sets for me

                      At least aubergines are a nice flower making them just enough to grow the plant

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                      • #12
                        Swede, id rather use my limited space for something else
                        Soya beans, didn't perform well (though most of my beans also performed poorly)

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                        • #13
                          Celeriac. There was a thread on here this year that I found really useful. I knew they were hungry plants but apparently they're mighty thirsty too. Not worth the water for me.

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Chippy Minton View Post
                            Melons - not really suited to the cool damp NW - would love one day to get just a small one.
                            I felt the same, having tried and failed 2 years running in my friend's greenhouse. I had 2 seeds left last year (Magenta and Alvaro) and in desperation grew them in a sunny raised bed filled with fresh horse muck and topped with about an inch of compost. I covered the bed with a cheap plastic cloche. The plants produced 10 melons between them, the biggest and nicest being Magenta.

                            This year I repeated the experiment, but only had one plant (Magenta) as the Alvaro was decapitated by slugs while hardening off in the greenhouse. The Magenta has produced 6 decent sized melons.

                            Seeds available from Plants of Distinction. Worth a try perhaps?
                            Last edited by Penellype; 27-09-2018, 07:41 AM.
                            A life is like a garden. Perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAP. - Leonard Nimoy

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Penellype View Post
                              I forgot to add aubergines. I actually bought plants, not seeds, but it made no difference. 3 attempts in the greenhouse yielded a total of one golf ball sized fruit. I'm not keen on aubergines anyway.
                              Originally posted by Chippy Minton View Post
                              At least aubergines are a nice flower making them just enough to grow the plant
                              My never again is also aubergines like Chippy says at least the flowers are pretty but after many failures I've given up.

                              Also Leeks mine never get much past pencil thickness

                              Pac choi always bolts no matter when I sow it.
                              Location....East Midlands.

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