A mummy trying to murder her babies is never a good thing
They look like they're struggling, but they're still going, yay! At the moment, I'm cultivating nothing but dust and sawdust - furniture that hasn't been moved in 10 years collects a *lot* of dust, whether you know it or not, and then when you try to saw things up, even "quality" mdf the dust is insane.
My chemist-quality aloe vera, and my air-purifying spider plants are upstairs out of the way, and it's a victory if *they* stay alive
Dammit ! Arrived in the blink of an eye. I realise that I've been looking to acquire some compost, but not this SACK OF S**T.
Moisture meter couldn't detect saturated mud or a cup of tea.
Frustrating! Does nobody do quality control nowadays?
The other one should arrive tomorrow. If that's a duffer I'll be enraged. Just lately I've been underwhelmed with amazon purchases.
Graceful Degradation! Prepping's objective summed up in two words. Turning Disaster into Mild Inconvenience by the power of fore-thought
I have just planted parsnips in loo roll tubes, and planted dwarf tomato seeds. My cauli and cabbage don't look great that I started in a heated propagator on the conservatory window ledge. The first true leaves are coming but the original leaves are looking brown and curled. I have the heating on the propagator at night to keep warmth in the soil and keeping the soil moist but not wet. I had the same issue last year. I am thinking that although they get loads of light and day time temp is warm, the vast fluctuation in conservatory temperature between night and day is not doing them any favours. Maybe now they have germinated I shouldn't be using the heated propagator ... argh!
"Today is the tomorrow that you worrried about yesterday" - unknown
"Smoke me a kipper, I'll be back for breakfast" - Red Dwarf
(Area 3)
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'm going to be controversial. Please humour me. Starting from the worthiness of growing the noble spud.
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
Any thoughts or additions? Arguments?
This list is awsesome! Pasted straight into Notes app. Tomorrow will go through it and order some seeds. Oh, re me having too many seed spuds, I still have the grow bags from a couple of years ago, might chuck a couple in them and see what happens.
If you can lay your hands on a copy of Joy Larkum's book "Vegetable Gardening" you will find a useful table showing the Value to Space ratio along with details of how to grow each and every vegetable in detail.
It is one of my go to guides for veg. It is quite an old publication now but it is still in print. Roughly speaking the decision is based on how much space a crop needs and how long it is in the ground for. So parsnips are poor value as are other crops where the cost in the shop is low and they are in the ground for over 6 months. Meanwhile cut and come again salad veg gets a good score as it is expensive in the shops and quick to grow and needs little space to get multiple bags of salad.
Very early salad spuds are a nice choice as you can feel smug tucking into your homegrown new potaotes when everyone else is still paying silly money for Jersey Royals. I like Swift for this job but Rocket would be good too. They do need an unheated greenhouse or similar to beat the frosts.
jansman Moved from other thread wrote: ↑Mon Mar 21, 2022 4:51 pm
I can give you some really solid advice about using toilet roll pots ; Don’t. Plastic pots are far superior,and consistent.
Thanks.
On Youtube, they make it cardboard pods look like a no-brainer. Easy and effective transplanting, No messing around with thinning, etc. But the watering experience is a b****r to get right. Even worse with the bought paper mache ones. Fact is cardboard pots have been a dead loss! If I can get that watering right, I'll be made up, but to my neglectful, simple self, I concur. The small plastic pots in big trays of 20 from HomeBargain or ALDI are so much more successful for the actual germination. So are the repurposed Flash Speedmop trays with their clear lids.
Since I had LOADS of carrot seeds, I'm also attempting to pre-soak and germinate a few on damp kitchen roll. Saw that on youtube too. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YkMudOt2Iyw
Maybe not totally practical, but if I can SEE signs of life, I will simply feel more confident and not keep panicking and aborting seeds.Plus it's easy to get 3 to 5 days of germination without daily watering at that delicate time.
Graceful Degradation! Prepping's objective summed up in two words. Turning Disaster into Mild Inconvenience by the power of fore-thought
I've never particularly used garden fertilizer or feed except a little on my tomatoes, because each crop has been pretty much into newly bought compost.
How can i best know whether my compost is depleted of nutrients after that one crop? Is there an easy way to test compost 'goodness'?
E.g. Last year, I got a first humble crop of veg from my one of my planters which had been filled with a mix of soil, growbags and general purpose compost. I never used commercial fertilizer.
The soil/compost that is in there LOOKS as good as it ever did, but I expect it's depleted and tired. Do I just add more compost to it, or do I swap it out, or do i add fertilizer. I'd hate to think i was discarding anything useful if there is still richness in it. If nothing else, it is bulk. I could put some in my composter to mix with 'the good stuff' but is that just padding it out to give me the warm feeling of a full composter.
Would it be a sin to just feed it with Miracle Grow or similar? And how do I know if i overdo that? Damn. that stuff's expensive!
Best value fertilizer to buy? Liquids or granules? Or am I an heathen for even thinking it??
Graceful Degradation! Prepping's objective summed up in two words. Turning Disaster into Mild Inconvenience by the power of fore-thought
jennyjj01 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 31, 2022 1:20 pm
Another open question for our expert gardeners.
I've never particularly used garden fertilizer or feed except a little on my tomatoes, because each crop has been pretty much into newly bought compost.
How can i best know whether my compost is depleted of nutrients after that one crop? Is there an easy way to test compost 'goodness'?
E.g. Last year, I got a first humble crop of veg from my one of my planters which had been filled with a mix of soil, growbags and general purpose compost. I never used commercial fertilizer.
The soil/compost that is in there LOOKS as good as it ever did, but I expect it's depleted and tired. Do I just add more compost to it, or do I swap it out, or do i add fertilizer. I'd hate to think i was discarding anything useful if there is still richness in it. If nothing else, it is bulk. I could put some in my composter to mix with 'the good stuff' but is that just padding it out to give me the warm feeling of a full composter.
Would it be a sin to just feed it with Miracle Grow or similar? And how do I know if i overdo that? Damn. that stuff's expensive!
Best value fertilizer to buy? Liquids or granules? Or am I an heathen for even thinking it??
If you are growing in troughs or containers, you need fertiliser.As per instructions on the box.
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.