Decent punnet of rasps
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Today I harvested 2022….
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Runner beans and a big punnet of tomatoes.
A few beetroot from around a guest purple skinned potato that proved itself blight resistant last year. The top looked ready and the crop was.
I am keeping some tubas for next year for a formal row of these.Near Worksop on heavy clay soil
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Toms, Q's, basil, parsley, peppers and a single courgette.Nestled somewhere in the Cambridgeshire Fens. Good soil, strong winds and 4 Giant Puffballs!
Always aim for the best result possible not the best possible result
Forever indebted to Potstubsdustbins
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Originally posted by Plot70 View PostMostly cape gooseberries.
I've been trying to grow them for years, but I always seem to have such trouble getting them going. The seeds either don't germinate or else they damp off (despite never having had any other seedlings damp off on me ever), and then when you do grow they seem to grow only very slowly to start with. By the time I get decent plants large enough to plant out, it's usually late June, and then although they do grow well and produce lots of fruit, only about 5% of them actually ripen before the first frosts.
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Originally posted by ameno View Post
What variety do you grow, and how do you manage to get a good crop from them outside?
I've been trying to grow them for years, but I always seem to have such trouble getting them going. The seeds either don't germinate or else they damp off (despite never having had any other seedlings damp off on me ever), and then when you do grow they seem to grow only very slowly to start with. By the time I get decent plants large enough to plant out, it's usually late June, and then although they do grow well and produce lots of fruit, only about 5% of them actually ripen before the first frosts.
In the first year I got a small amount of late fruit. I then built a wall of horse manure around the root stocks after the frost trimmed the tops and patted all the stems in over the roots and covered the bed with a sheet of glass from a scrap patio door.
A second bed was made up with root stocks that were grown in a greenhouse border for there first year and transplanted.
They took ages to get going in the cold weather in the spring.
The transplant bed fruited earlier with smaller fruits.
I have only found one or two cracked fruits due to the spell of hot weather.
Near Worksop on heavy clay soil
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