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Top 3 successes for this year (first ever veg growing)
1. Lettuces, glut is not the word! But bolted as soon as the weather warmed up
2. Courgettes, good steady supply of these, but quickly got sick of eating them with EVERYTHING
3. Onions and Shallots, very successful but onions on the small side due to my planting them too close.
Top 3 Failures
1. Carrots & Parsnips, just 4 carrots and 3 parsnips germinated. Waste of a bed!
2. Spinach, just bolted every attempt
3. Early Potatoes, small yield. Not sure why. Mains yet to be dug up.
ups and downs with everything else. Learned a lot for next year tho.. planning allready!
potatoes-fine at home-disaster in allot. onons fair, carrot fine, beet fine peas only fair. cabbage, broc-fine. the beauty of this forum is you realise a lot of people have the same problems as you. there is always a shoulder to cry on!!!!!!!!!!
Hi - This is just about our first year of growing veg properly. We turned over our small lawn to raised beds and we've, so far, had a really good time with
Asparagus - only 2nd year so small crops but we are hopeful
courettes - best crops for ages - gave up on containers, put into ground
Dwarf French beans - absolutely brilliant still eating and freezing
Tomatoes - 5 different ones all cropping madly
Cucumbers - 1st attempt, OH killed one, he's now banned from greenhouse
carrots - early ones great, still cropping and have sown more
beetroot - in the wrong place so not so good
sprouts - gone berserk, tiny sprouts appearing now - looking forward to Xmas
Parsnips - also look good
Chard - lots but going over now
Spring onions - better in containers
Turnips - just one short row but we've put another in
Runners beans - eaten so many we're starting to look like them
French climbing beans - awful
Peppers - a bit slow but coming on
Chillis - drying some and giving them away
Onions/Shallots - fantastic we're going to be self sufficient. Loads to pickle which is just as well as my lot love pickled onions, especially chilli pickled.
Potatoes - amazing did 3 varieties in containers and we're getting an average of 5lb per tub, definately growing more of the same next year.
Can anyone give me some advice as to what I can put in now, I hate seeing bare beds, and thanks for all the good advice. I don't post much as I don't know half as much as you lot but I do 'pick' your brains a lot.
Forgot to mention lettuces, spinch, rocket, american cress, basil, parsley, peas and sweetcorn. All in containers!! Whew we never seem to stop watering.
Have you thought of Lambs Lettuce/Mache? This can be planted now and over wintered under fleece, wonderful when there are no lettuce. Its slow to germinate and dont plant it too deeply. Yhere are also some short day lettuce that will over winter if sown now, I m trying Optima for the first time. You could also put in some Autumn onions. I am ging to try this as those I grew from sets have been rubbish for the last two years.
Gardening requires a lot of water - most of it in the form of perspiration. Lou Erickson, critic and poet
Best results this year have been climbing french bean blauhilde, runners (variety unknown - given by a fellow allotmenteer), courgettes well under way, all new pots especially duke of york and arran pilot - not impressed with maris peer in our soil). Toms are looking good, all leafy stuff is doing well especially leaf beet, cima di rapa and giant red mustard. Leeks and swede have taken well and am experiencing what for me is a glut of cucumber - the most I have managed in the past is two decent cukes in a whole summer must have struck lucky with the varieties. Oh yes and the left over jerusalem artichokes are turning into triffids Have had to make strawberry jam - pity that!! Loads of blackberries too.
Very disappointing - broad beans, got chocolate spot but managed to get some into the freezer.
Ger-annie-um have you thought about green manures if you have some spaces. There are some that can fit in any part of the rotation. Have a look at the HDRA site
Hi there everyone, am totally new to this as is my first year growing ANYTHING. We moved into present house at beginning of april and inherited a large, crusty, old greenhouse. A bit of elbow grease cleaned it up a treat and it seemed a shame to leave it empty so I borrowed a few books from the library and set about growing some grub.
courgettes have been the shining star, so much so infact that the sight of them almost makes me nauseous. I have 6 plants and have had 2 or 3 every day from them.
peas planted in may were superb and plentiful.
ruddy birds ate most of strawberries, even when I transplanted them into tubs and put them in the greenhouse the little darlings still nipped in there and pecked at the ripe fruit, leaving little poo presents for me.
runner beans were total waste of time. a lot of the flowers just dropped off and the rest were far and few between
am enjoying french beans at the moment, purple and yellow dwarf varieties which are tasty. Hubby keeps taking them into work to impress the chefs.
Lots of stuff I would have done differently but lifes a learning curve and there is always next year!!!
Potatoes 'Majestic' excellent but not enough of them. Pink Fir Apple tried one plant last week and just stunningly good, some still a bit small, but early days.
Courgettes but slow, late start because cold dry weather in April
Lettuce 'Mervaille de Quatre Saisons' excellent but bolted early July, second sowing got eaten by something at seedling stage, but have just sown some more last week.
French/Runner/Borlotti beans all under way now. Blue Lake climbing particularly good. Runners good too at last. Borlotti a monster plant but seems all leaf, but I'm patient.
Parsley wonderful planted and neglected in the ground, but rubbish cossetted in a pot
Bad
Carrots 'Amini' (first attempt in container) waited ages for things the size of a pencil stub.
Cabbages 'January King' got eaten by slugs, would like to try again if still time?
Spinach bolted as soon as the first true leaves appeared, just so awful and a waste of space.
Rocket not as good as last year's, but have resown now the weather's cooled down.
Peas (first growing attempt) had about 4 (very delicious) pods — hardly the bumper crop I'd been expecting, sweet peas were rubbish as well.
Sweetcorn,sweetcorn,sweetcorn. Just had our first ever grown sweetcorn this evening and have never tasted anything so good and what a feeling of accomplishment.
Glad your sweetcorn was such a success Limbury Lad. Enjoy it all. My potatoes in buckets have been just excellent. Emptied a bucket of Nadine today and got 4.5 pounds of gorgeous potatoes from 1 seed potatoe planted 10 weeks go. That's got to be success. Had some for dinner. Scrummy, but not as good as Charlotte. Still got Nicola to come. Sounds like the dancing girls.
From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.
Interesting to see it all up there and how u went with different stuff.
As for my second season I am not too impressed with the tomatoes as all got pretty blighted but fruited until September however few ripening well even in greenhouse. Roma did funny things both seasons so will not go for them next time.
Aubergines flowers no fruit in or out of G house
Patty pan squash good but quick end with mould.
Very impressed with mini parnips from Dobies with good germination on several sowings. If left can get large but still tender.
Carrots so so. Usual problems.
Broad beans great at first but wiped out by rust pretty fast
Peas ok to start but mould cut them short (as with sweet peas)
Potatoes good with earlies but my neighbours main season ones rotted due to wet I suspect (as we have very high water table in our allotments). Another neighbour did well however with mains and I put that down to his very thorough deep digging and incorporating masses of compost.
Overall due to wet weather and lack of heat I had a few obvious problems with ripening and fungal diseases.
better luck next year folks!!
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