My first Winter salad sowings are week 24, w/c 8th June - chicory, endive, radicchio
Then lots of stuff week 32, w/c 3rd August - lettuce (barcelona, soleison, winter density, winter imperial, rougette du midi, vailan), cress
Then much the same week 36, w/c 31st August - lettuce, mizuna / mustard, rocket.
End of Spring Bits and Bobs.
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- Primrose
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I think that's the joy of being a gardener. One is able to be surprised and delighted by such small happenings in your garden or plot.
Just the first big poppy bursting its bud or the picking of the first pea. And the strange thing about it is that the following year the same small miracles happen all over again yet the pleasure of the excitement never fades because of the annual repetition. We're lucky to be able to find our satisfactions in such small events, especially in difficult times like this.
Just the first big poppy bursting its bud or the picking of the first pea. And the strange thing about it is that the following year the same small miracles happen all over again yet the pleasure of the excitement never fades because of the annual repetition. We're lucky to be able to find our satisfactions in such small events, especially in difficult times like this.
- oldherbaceous
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How wonderfully put, Primrose....
Kind Regards, Old Herbaceous.
There's no fool like an old fool.
There's no fool like an old fool.
- oldherbaceous
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All the allotment holders, including me, have a big problem with cabbage root fly on the brassicas, at the momment!
Kind Regards, Old Herbaceous.
There's no fool like an old fool.
There's no fool like an old fool.
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Some of the farms round here grow carrots and brassicas under fleece for the organic sales, but some do just spray sadly, herbicides and insecticides. Some where complaining that some of the chemicals had been banned, they have forgotten how to grow plants properly it seems.
Been gardening for over 65 years and still learning.
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If the farmers are going to feed a nation (well provide 40<50% of what we eat), they are not going to go for organic, low intensive methods.
Nothing is foolproof to a sufficiently talented fool.
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Perhaps if the buyers were not so particular with the shape of the product (example straight carrots) the farmes could could concentrate on growing better tasting product.
- oldherbaceous
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That looks fantastic, Elmigo...what you have achieved in a few months is quite amazing...
Kind Regards, Old Herbaceous.
There's no fool like an old fool.
There's no fool like an old fool.
- retropants
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Looks fabulous! I was going to say use next door's garden too!!