Bumper year for figs. There's a limit to how many you can eat...gorgeous as they are....so it's non-stop fig jam and fig chutney making at the moment. Any other fig ideas will be appreciated. Just can't bear to let them go to waste.
Growing your own - is it worth it?
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostBumper year for figs. There's a limit to how many you can eat...gorgeous as they are....so it's non-stop fig jam and fig chutney making at the moment. Any other fig ideas will be appreciated. Just can't bear to let them go to waste.
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Originally posted by gradus View PostDug up some Vivaldi well into secondary growth following all the rain, very small but delicious steamed.
Any thoughts on stuff to sow now that will actually get used?
http://moreveg.co.uk/ has suggestions for September sowing.
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Originally posted by oddoneout View PostQuite a lot of salading(stuff harvested as small leaves rather than whole large plants) is worth sowing now - things like leaf spinach, cut and come again lettuce, many of the oriental greens, beetroot and chard for baby leaves, radishes might produce roots. With the soil being warm and the days being not too hot and dry growth can be quite impressive.
http://moreveg.co.uk/ has suggestions for September sowing.
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We've very recently taken on an allotment so I may well be asking questions more frequently here soon! It's taken hours so far to remove the nettles and the Mares Tails (which apparently are an absolute swine to get rid of so we've been ripping them out as much as possible and will grow things over the top of them as the roots go down about 2 metres, apparently). It's been fun so far!Best regards,
Jonathan
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Originally posted by Jonathan View PostWe've very recently taken on an allotment so I may well be asking questions more frequently here soon! It's taken hours so far to remove the nettles and the Mares Tails (which apparently are an absolute swine to get rid of so we've been ripping them out as much as possible and will grow things over the top of them as the roots go down about 2 metres, apparently). It's been fun so far!
Nettles will yield to persistence; their green tops are excellent compost or liquid feed material, and the roots, being tough and inclined to grow close to the surface, are much easier to pull out than many weeds - the bright yellow colour is also helpful!
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Thanks for all of that oddoneout! We're avoiding using weedkiller on it as we did some research and it said the same as you did - it doesn't work! We've been pulling up as much as possible and are just trying to stay on top of it.
The Nettles were a doddle in comparison - just a quick hoe and they were knocked over. In yesterdays hot sun, the uprooted plants soon begun to wilt and one of our fellow allotmenters (is that a word?) said they'd die and rot in quickly.
Thanks again!Best regards,
Jonathan
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Originally posted by Jonathan View PostWe've very recently taken on an allotment so I may well be asking questions more frequently here soon! It's taken hours so far to remove the nettles and the Mares Tails (which apparently are an absolute swine to get rid of so we've been ripping them out as much as possible and will grow things over the top of them as the roots go down about 2 metres, apparently). It's been fun so far!
Best of luck with the new allotment, despite everything that nature throws at us it is still well worth the effort.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostIt is often said that growing potatoes is a Good Thing when you are starting to use a new or overgrown plot. Maybe it's all the digging and earthing up that does it. :oh:
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Jonathan
This sounds like a terrible cliché but I find that growing your own food gives you (me) something like a primeval pleasure and gardening makes you (me) very much aware of the natural cycle of life.
Good luck with your allotment but don’t be tempted to grow pumpkins. They have invaded just about everything around them in my garden and now they have pushed down the rabbit fence almost to the ground. I had to cover the endives I planted a few days ago with a net before they are all nibbled to the ground.
gradus
Dug up some Vivaldi …
ardcarp
Apparently, potatoes improve soil by wriggling about in the ground as they grow.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostJonathan
This sounds like a terrible cliché but I find that growing your own food gives you (me) something like a primeval pleasure and gardening makes you (me) very much aware of the natural cycle of life.
Good luck with your allotment but don’t be tempted to grow pumpkins. They have invaded just about everything around them in my garden and now they have pushed down the rabbit fence almost to the ground. I had to cover the endives I planted a few days ago with a net before they are all nibbled to the ground.
gradus
I don’t know how many times I said this but I can’t help repeating it: are they all-year-round?
ardcarp
Apparently, potatoes improve soil by wriggling about in the ground as they grow.
Spuds do indeed wriggle about - but if they can't get into the soil properly that may bring them to the surface, which is most definitely not desirable as green potatoes are useless(unlike green tomatoes).
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