After seeing an article in the paper in January we decided to give this a go. It's been quite an exciting experiment. We've had radishes for weeks, salad leaves and the spinach is also ready now. The winter lettuces are almost ready. The winter peas are in full flower and the carrots are well underway.
I bought Jack Firsts book about hot beds (after we had cobbled together our own!). We dug a deep hole in our veg bed, filled it with horse manure and straw then put a large bag of compost on the top. My hubby built a frame to go over the top using wood and some double insulated rigid plastic from b&q. It's about 2-2 1/2 ft tall with a removable lid. I think we got it started late Jan/early feb and within a couple of days there was condensation on the inside. The radishes sprouted within a couple of weeks.
The basic theory is that the rotting horse manure gets hot and heats from under the soil then takes a few months to cool completely by which time the weather is warmer.
The Victorians and Romans used this method for growing veg out of season. Has anyone else tried anything like this?
I bought Jack Firsts book about hot beds (after we had cobbled together our own!). We dug a deep hole in our veg bed, filled it with horse manure and straw then put a large bag of compost on the top. My hubby built a frame to go over the top using wood and some double insulated rigid plastic from b&q. It's about 2-2 1/2 ft tall with a removable lid. I think we got it started late Jan/early feb and within a couple of days there was condensation on the inside. The radishes sprouted within a couple of weeks.
The basic theory is that the rotting horse manure gets hot and heats from under the soil then takes a few months to cool completely by which time the weather is warmer.
The Victorians and Romans used this method for growing veg out of season. Has anyone else tried anything like this?
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