Apologies to Marketmore cucumbers, which I said were OUT this year (also called them Moneymaker, adding insult to injury). Have had 2 nice cucs now and they have withstood the gale force winds in the garden to boot. Sorry, MMs, you are now back IN.
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No announcement yet.
What's in, What's out for next year?
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IN
Alderman climbing peas. A huge crop from a tiny space and no pesky maggots in the, not one.
Red Baron onions. Rock solid, a bit variable in size but that's a benefit really - sometimes you only need a small one sometimes a big one.
Lady Di runner beans - not a string in sight even the big ones.
Marketmore cucumbers, tasty, reliable and lots of them.
Sungold and Gardener's Delight - who needs chocs when you have these, so sweet and reliable too.
Alicante - masses of large tasty tomatoes
MAYBE IN MAYBE OUT
Eskimo carrots - tasty yes, reliable yes, but they fork horribly on my soil.
OUT
The Sutton broad bean, just didn't work for me this year. They grew well but the crop was small.
Boltardy beetroot - was it too dry or what?
Little Gem lettuce - I had lots of small thinnings at the beginning of the season, each enough for a salad sandwich but I can't seem to get them past the "small" stage.
White Lisbon spring onions - they've been a joke for several years now and I've lost patience.
AWAITING JUDGEMENT
Late summer planted Pentland Javelin. Late planted potatoes work a treat for me normally, this is a new variety I'm trying. Results will be in October time.
Reddy Spinach from seed late summer planting - just gone into pots, results should be in October time.
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OUT: mangetout peas, outdoor tomatoes (blight is too disappointing), sweet peppers, lady christl spuds, maincrop spuds in anything other than bags, marketmore cukes, sweetpeas - unless I can grow beans amongst them that is.
IN: as much of everything else as I can cram in, but definitely rosa bianca aubergines, red gooseberries, strawberries, little gem lettuce, achocha, padron peppers, parsnips, watermelon (outside, in our climate - genius!) and many, many squashes.http://mudandgluts.com - growing fruit and veg in suburbia
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Out - sweet peppers, and possibly all chillis except Cayenne. Having nurtured all these plants from early February, I resent them refusing to ripen and then going rotten on the plant while still green. I do want to try 'Padron' next year though.
Out - anything but cherry tomatoes, for the same reason as above - if things didn't ripen this year, they're never going to ripen!
Out (regretfully), aubergines. After another year of failure I just can't justify the space and attention they take. They look great until they start to flower and then they just go rotten and die.He-Pep!
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Originally posted by marchogaeth View PostWhat variety?
Red Star F1http://mudandgluts.com - growing fruit and veg in suburbia
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OUT - Sweetcorn, unless someone can advise a variety I am capable of growing (normally get small cobs, patchy corn on said cobs).
OUT - Dwarf beans (take up too much space for the yield I managed).
OUT - 50% of the tomato varieties grown this year > 20 varieties is toooooo much.
IN - More squashes
IN - ? undecidedWhile wearing your night clothes, plant cucumbers on the 1st May before the sun comes up, and they will not be attacked by bugs.
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and padron peppers are very tasty, and prolific. Mine are merrily still going.http://mudandgluts.com - growing fruit and veg in suburbia
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A long time ago:-
Out - any spring onions In - Everlasting onion (plant and forget, occasionally divide)
Out - green gooseberries In - red gooseberries (sweeter and yummier)
For next year:-
Out - aubergine (any traditional purple type - moneymaker, black beauty etc I have never got anything worth talking about. I know it is probably me but time for a change)
In - aubergine (turkish orange, bianca sfumata rosa - this is last chance saloon for aubs.)
Out - Melon (petit gris de reines - first year a few non exciting fruits, this year plants that reluctantly grew 2ft and refused to do anything)
In - Melon ( sweet baby melon and sugar baby watermelon)
Oh and Noos, if you are reading how would you describe the taste of your champion of england peas? I find mine a bit dry and floury, fine for cooking but that is about it.
or anyone else that grows that variety
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Originally posted by Norfolkgrey View PostOh and Noos, if you are reading how would you describe the taste of your champion of england peas? I find mine a bit dry and floury, fine for cooking but that is about it.
or anyone else that grows that variety
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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Originally posted by Alison View PostQuick question though, what else do you want to do with them?
Most of the peas I grow never make the kitchen as they get eaten where they grow, but the old champs do - so I suppose it is kind of a good thing. Also when I say cooking I tend to mean hidden away in soups, stews and such likes, not cooked and served by themselves. I sometimes use peas raw in salads as well. Varieties I always grow are colossal climbing, greengage and feltham first all have a nice sweetness. I am also working my way through various petit pois varieties but none are on my always list yet.
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