Advice for a hopeless gardener
- diamond lil
- Posts: 10324
- Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2010 1:42 pm
- Location: Scotland.
Re: Advice for a hopeless gardener
Jansman can you grow tatties in the shade? I've no room apart from one patch that only gets the early morning sun and then that's it for the day. Faces due east in a corner of wall and fence. Wonder if a few tubs in there might work?
Re: Advice for a hopeless gardener
I'm going to be controversial. Please humour me. Starting from the worthiness of growing the noble spud.diamond lil wrote: ↑Mon Feb 07, 2022 7:55 am Jansman can you grow tatties in the shade? I've no room apart from one patch that only gets the early morning sun and then that's it for the day. Faces due east in a corner of wall and fence. Wonder if a few tubs in there might work?
I googled " What vegetables to grow UK " because I have my own thoughts on what is and isn't worth the effort and groundspace. And I'm just not getting it, for me. Spuds were a top recommendation of one site But that seemed to be based on a massive yield, without reference to how cheap they are in the shops. Similar with carrots.
I'm really at odds with the idea of putting effort and resources into 'low monetary value' crops.
YES. I would change my attitude if the shops stopped supplying staples so cheaply!
With limited ground area, and zero expertise, I tried to weigh up the pros and cons of various things to grow.
Here are my thoughts, applicable to ME. Your Mileage May Vary.
If I have a try at spuds or carrots, it will be on a small scale just to see if I can do it.
Am I being totally wrong headed here? Spoiled by our easy access to food?
| Crop | Shop Price/kg | Yield by Area | For | Against | Observation | In my plan? |
| Garlic: | £Stupid/kg | Medium | Long Harvest Season | Easy to grow a small crop | Yes | |
| Herbs: | £Stupid/kg | Low | Easy to grow | Worth a small patch | Yes | |
| Strawberries: | £5.00/kg | Low | Delish | Need lots of care | I haven't succeeded | Yes |
| Spring Onions: | £5.00/kg | Low/Medium? | Easy to grow | Worth a small patch | Yes | |
| Chard (or similar): | £3.00/kg | High | Fast growing | Not to everyone's taste | Yes | |
| Green Beans: | £3.00/kg | High | VFM, but I don't like them | No | ||
| Courgettes: | £3.00/kg | Low | Staple | Not to everyone's taste | Yes | |
| Beetroot: | £2.50/kg | Medium | Fast growing | Not to everyone's taste | Yes | |
| Tomatoes: | £2.50/kg | High | Easy to grow | Need some care | High value Staple | Yes! |
| Beansprouts (mung): | £2.50/kg | High | Grow on demand | It's a crop | Yes | |
| Leeks: | £2.00/kg | Low | Easy to grow | Worth a small patch | Yes | |
| Lettuce etc: | £1.50/kg | Low | Fast growing | Need some care | Not my staple | No |
| Onions: | £1.25/kg | Medium | Long Harvest | Absolute staple | Yes | |
| Parsnips: | £1.00/kg | Medium | Long Harvest | Not to everyone's taste | Yes | |
| Spuds: | 50p/kg | High | Staple | Risk of lost crop | Why bother | No |
| Carrots: | 40p/kg | medium | Staple | Why bother | No |
Graceful Degradation! Prepping's objective summed up in two words. Turning Disaster into Mild Inconvenience by the power of fore-thought
Not Feeling Optimistic. Let me be wrong
Not Feeling Optimistic. Let me be wrong
- diamond lil
- Posts: 10324
- Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2010 1:42 pm
- Location: Scotland.
Re: Advice for a hopeless gardener
I've just always grown my own tatties, I like having them 
Re: Advice for a hopeless gardener
They will grow in partial shade Lil. Some sunlight is needed. I only grow spuds in containers, and mine get about five hours sun a day. I get enough from a 12” pot for one meal for two as a rule. Here’s a link:diamond lil wrote: ↑Mon Feb 07, 2022 7:55 am Jansman can you grow tatties in the shade? I've no room apart from one patch that only gets the early morning sun and then that's it for the day. Faces due east in a corner of wall and fence. Wonder if a few tubs in there might work?
https://greenupside.com/can-potatoes-gr ... they-need/
In three words I can sum up everything I have learned about life: It goes on.
Robert Frost.
Covid 19: After that level of weirdness ,any situation is certainly possible.
Me.
Robert Frost.
Covid 19: After that level of weirdness ,any situation is certainly possible.
Me.
Re: Advice for a hopeless gardener
Grow Your Own Vegetables by Joy Larkcom has been my guide for years and includes a value to space guide. I too have limited growing space so my personal rules run as follows:
Normal times: Grow for fun & to learn. Grow things that might be expensive or which are simply not often seen in the shops. e,g, I grow Oca which we eat at Christmas but is never seen in the shops round here. Easy to grow but not a good return for the space committed. New potatoes are very expensive early in the season but a couple of pots of Rocket or Swift in a greenhouse is very achievable and makes for a treat. Maincrop needs too much room. Have you seen the price of a couple of sprigs of rosemary or parsley in the supermarket? I usually grow a selection of herbs, raspberries, tomatoes, beans, courgettes and a few squash. Anything that grows vertically (or can be made to grow upwards) is good in tight space.
SHTF times: I intend to convert the lawn and flower beds to produce food and aim to produce as much nutrition as possible in the space. This is when I would want to grow maincrop spuds, parsnips, carrots, beans and anything with a lot of nutrients/calories for the space needed and is otherwise not to be had. The hard bit will be realising I need to convert the lawn (& persuade the family) in time to plant which is probably well before the SHTF situation becomes obvious to all. I may even remove less productive food plants like my siberian kiwi if it means I can cram in more productive food plants.
Normal times: Grow for fun & to learn. Grow things that might be expensive or which are simply not often seen in the shops. e,g, I grow Oca which we eat at Christmas but is never seen in the shops round here. Easy to grow but not a good return for the space committed. New potatoes are very expensive early in the season but a couple of pots of Rocket or Swift in a greenhouse is very achievable and makes for a treat. Maincrop needs too much room. Have you seen the price of a couple of sprigs of rosemary or parsley in the supermarket? I usually grow a selection of herbs, raspberries, tomatoes, beans, courgettes and a few squash. Anything that grows vertically (or can be made to grow upwards) is good in tight space.
SHTF times: I intend to convert the lawn and flower beds to produce food and aim to produce as much nutrition as possible in the space. This is when I would want to grow maincrop spuds, parsnips, carrots, beans and anything with a lot of nutrients/calories for the space needed and is otherwise not to be had. The hard bit will be realising I need to convert the lawn (& persuade the family) in time to plant which is probably well before the SHTF situation becomes obvious to all. I may even remove less productive food plants like my siberian kiwi if it means I can cram in more productive food plants.
Re: Advice for a hopeless gardener
Perfectly sound reasoning, Lil. I wasn't trying to knock anyone else's choice.diamond lil wrote: ↑Mon Feb 07, 2022 2:35 pm I've just always grown my own tatties, I like having them![]()
The link Jansman sent us too pretty much rules out spuds for me. The house shades my growing area for a large part of the day.
I'll maybe try a small trug, but might have to move it around.
Thanks GillyBee. Ebook downloaded.GillyBee wrote: ↑Mon Feb 07, 2022 5:42 pm Grow Your Own Vegetables by Joy Larkcom has been my guide for years and includes a value to space guide. I too have limited growing space so my personal rules run as follows:
Normal times: Grow for fun & to learn. Grow things that might be expensive or which are simply not often seen in the shops. e,g, I grow Oca which we eat at Christmas but is never seen in the shops round here. Easy to grow but not a good return for the space committed. New potatoes are very expensive early in the season but a couple of pots of Rocket or Swift in a greenhouse is very achievable and makes for a treat. Maincrop needs too much room. Have you seen the price of a couple of sprigs of rosemary or parsley in the supermarket? I usually grow a selection of herbs, raspberries, tomatoes, beans, courgettes and a few squash. Anything that grows vertically (or can be made to grow upwards) is good in tight space.
SHTF times: I intend to convert the lawn and flower beds to produce food and aim to produce as much nutrition as possible in the space. This is when I would want to grow maincrop spuds, parsnips, carrots, beans and anything with a lot of nutrients/calories for the space needed and is otherwise not to be had. The hard bit will be realising I need to convert the lawn (& persuade the family) in time to plant which is probably well before the SHTF situation becomes obvious to all. I may even remove less productive food plants like my siberian kiwi if it means I can cram in more productive food plants.
Well to the extent that these are 'normal times' I'm in 'start to learn' mode, so I probably should gives spuds a go. When SHTF, I'll have to find some moss recipes if I'm to produce food from my lawn
Meanwhile.... I think I might have drowned my tomato babies. They got a lot of rain while they were briefly uncovered.
Graceful Degradation! Prepping's objective summed up in two words. Turning Disaster into Mild Inconvenience by the power of fore-thought
Not Feeling Optimistic. Let me be wrong
Not Feeling Optimistic. Let me be wrong
Re: Advice for a hopeless gardener
It takes a year or two to know what works on your ground. Most are not blessed- or cursed- with a large tract of land. Work with what you have.
In three words I can sum up everything I have learned about life: It goes on.
Robert Frost.
Covid 19: After that level of weirdness ,any situation is certainly possible.
Me.
Robert Frost.
Covid 19: After that level of weirdness ,any situation is certainly possible.
Me.
- diamond lil
- Posts: 10324
- Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2010 1:42 pm
- Location: Scotland.
Re: Advice for a hopeless gardener
Ty Jansman. Pity. The only other way I can think of then, is to buy a biggish storage box thing and put the tatties in tubs on the top. They'd be in the sun if they were higher than next door's fence.
Re: Advice for a hopeless gardener
Jenny.Your tomatoes shouldn’t be anywhere near rain yet!
They need a constant growing temperature of 15 c minimum,or you’ll negatively check their growth .I believe you are growing outside,so they won’t do well exposed yet.‘Hardening off’ shouldn’t happen ‘til early May,really.
Keep them moist,but not ‘wet’,or you’ll run the risk of ‘damping off’ - it’s a fungal thing that makes your seedlings disappear overnight!- and make sure they have airflow.It’s a bit like making sure you take vegetables out of supermarket plastic so they don’t sweat.
Keep them moist,but not ‘wet’,or you’ll run the risk of ‘damping off’ - it’s a fungal thing that makes your seedlings disappear overnight!- and make sure they have airflow.It’s a bit like making sure you take vegetables out of supermarket plastic so they don’t sweat.
In three words I can sum up everything I have learned about life: It goes on.
Robert Frost.
Covid 19: After that level of weirdness ,any situation is certainly possible.
Me.
Robert Frost.
Covid 19: After that level of weirdness ,any situation is certainly possible.
Me.
Re: Advice for a hopeless gardener
Doh!jansman wrote: ↑Tue Feb 08, 2022 6:02 am Jenny.Your tomatoes shouldn’t be anywhere near rain yet!They need a constant growing temperature of 15 c minimum,or you’ll negatively check their growth .I believe you are growing outside,so they won’t do well exposed yet.‘Hardening off’ shouldn’t happen ‘til early May,really.
Keep them moist,but not ‘wet’,or you’ll run the risk of ‘damping off’ - it’s a fungal thing that makes your seedlings disappear overnight!- and make sure they have airflow.It’s a bit like making sure you take vegetables out of supermarket plastic so they don’t sweat.![]()
Thanks Jansman.
They are in little pots on a tray and I'd put them in my Poly tent greenhouse. Unfortunately they had an hour or to out in the open and the compost got saturated. Made them wilt and look pretty sickly
So, I popped the tray in my electric propagator, with the plastic lid off, still inside the greenhouse, so that they get some sun and a chance for the soil to dry out a bit. I think most of them recovered a bit, but it's touch and go.
I'm hopeful that I can be disciplined enough to get and keep the moisture level right until their final home. Going to tool up with soil moisture and PH sensors. Probably need alarms to stop me neglecting them again.
With that in mind, I did a bit of a survey and realised that there are a few places where planters can catch sun and not look out of place. Project for Spring will be Sunmapping my garden properly
Big seed order placed! More for me to torture
My babies say "Hi.... HELPPPPPP! Mummies trying to murder us. Send help. Please!"
Last edited by jennyjj01 on Tue Feb 08, 2022 3:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Graceful Degradation! Prepping's objective summed up in two words. Turning Disaster into Mild Inconvenience by the power of fore-thought
Not Feeling Optimistic. Let me be wrong
Not Feeling Optimistic. Let me be wrong