In Morries supermarket today they were selling 3 items of veg for a £1 or 50p each.
The items were 2.5kg Maris Piper, a swede, a savoy cabbage and 500g parsnips, leeks or sprouts and a kilo of carrots or onions.
All looked very fresh and those I bought were UK grown.
I've struggled to grow all of these this year, the potatoes haven't stored, leeks are still scrawny, sprouts nowhere near sprouting and so on. Plus, they're all in the ground for a long, long time, taking up growing room.
I'm idly wondering about not trying to grow winter veg next year but buying them as needed. Then using all of the growing space for summer/autumn crops which mature quicker and are more expensive to buy. During winter, the ground could be covered over and I could take the winter off.
Whilst it would be satisfying to grow every veg I eat, I'm not going to lose sleep about buying those I can't. Better that, IMO, than putting a lot of time and effort into growing something that's inedible.
What do you think?
The items were 2.5kg Maris Piper, a swede, a savoy cabbage and 500g parsnips, leeks or sprouts and a kilo of carrots or onions.
All looked very fresh and those I bought were UK grown.
I've struggled to grow all of these this year, the potatoes haven't stored, leeks are still scrawny, sprouts nowhere near sprouting and so on. Plus, they're all in the ground for a long, long time, taking up growing room.
I'm idly wondering about not trying to grow winter veg next year but buying them as needed. Then using all of the growing space for summer/autumn crops which mature quicker and are more expensive to buy. During winter, the ground could be covered over and I could take the winter off.
Whilst it would be satisfying to grow every veg I eat, I'm not going to lose sleep about buying those I can't. Better that, IMO, than putting a lot of time and effort into growing something that's inedible.
What do you think?
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