|
October 17, 2024, 20:41:44 by historygardening | Views: 2569 | Comments: 6
I am looking for diagrams of historical vegetable garden plans and layouts from books,magazine, pamphlets. if know a source of such diagram please post it, the website you found it or post the bibliographic source where is can be found. I already have copies of the ones in the WW2 dig for victory leaflets so please don't post them. my goal is to find ones that I have no seen yet. so far I collected over 200+ from 5 countries between 1880-2024. hope you can help. October 09, 2024, 15:24:33 by George the Pigman
Views: 3015 | Comments: 3 I've been buying raspberry canes recently to go into a raised bed in my plot. You know the ones where you get several canes in a pot then split them out and plant separately. I've bought them before I rang a local garden centre a few days ago and asked if they had "raspberry canes" and they knew straight away what I meant and said they were getting them in stock in a few days. So I went over yesterday and sure they were in stock but very few summer fruiting ones so I got some autumn fruiting ones . So I just bought Autumn fruiting ones. Today I rang up another large garden centre a bit further away and asked the same question to get Summer fruiting varieties and they said they were in stock. Took the bus down there and couldn't see them. Asked one of the assistants but he hadn't a clue really what I was talking about. Eventually got to talk to a manager and he took me to a small section of shrub fruit with a few pots containing single raspberry plants in containers at nearly £10 a plant. Certainly not what I was expecting. I asked about raspberry canes sold in the way I'm used to and he said we don't stock them as they don't last. He said he was a professional horticulturalist and when the single plants grow canes they call them raspberry canes and that was what they thought I was after! Needless to say I was rather miffed. Never heard of this confusion in terminology before. If you look at a website like say Dobies they specifically distinguish between raspberry canes as I know them and raspberry plants in containers. The latter being of course much more expensive per plant. Anyone come across this before? October 02, 2024, 14:30:32 by Vinlander
Views: 2746 | Comments: 6 I may have mentioned this before, but at my place tzatziki on battered fritters of baby squash or baby pumpkins are (massively) preferred to the relatively tasteless courgette version - no matter how fresh, no matter what landrace/variety. In fact courgettes are worse for any and every purpose (except possibly disappearing into the background of a dish quickly). I do the same with aubergines, and they are always good - but only baby squash/pumpkins come close to that intensity of flavour. I'd already decided to grow only one or two courgette plants this year - ideally I'd grow less - but the young ones are slightly nutty they are 2 or 3 weeks earlier. They are even earlier in a polytunnel, but sadly, genuine self-fertile varieties are getting so hard to find that I seldom bother these days (and when I do I bury them in 10L pots so I can move them outside ASAP for a better crop (ie. re-bury or transplant). However, this year I used my own saved seeds - and you've guessed it - they all came up as squash crosses... So - OK - I get more babies and better tasting fritters. But there's an extra angle now - I came back from holiday 3 or 4 weeks ago, (I've been too busy to post until now) and I was delighted to see that (for once) I didn't have any huge, seedy, horribly tasteless, armour-plated marrows to blunt my axe on their way to the compost bin. It's obvious now (I can be slow on the uptake). While you're away the baby squash turn into delicious adolescent squash - absolutely no waste at all this year. The longer you're away the bigger the squash & pumpkins get - they just get on with it - it's all good. I'd recommend sowing some squash late, so they're making babies during your summer holiday - but I haven't tested it yet - and no Indian summer might mean no babies anyway. The moral of this story is that 2 courgette plants and 6-10 squash (depending on their final size) is a win-win, and 10 squash and no courgettes is almost as good! Cheers. September 15, 2024, 19:25:04 by George the Pigman
Views: 4911 | Comments: 3 I have decided to plant raspberries in one of my raised beds this coming year. I've planted them before in an area at the back of the allotment that I now realise was too shaded and very poorly drained (we have clay soil) and needless to say they did badly. I'm going to get some raspberry canes from a local garden centre, start them off in pots this year then plant them out next year in one of my 8ft by 4ft raised beds. Any ideas about planting distances specifically for raised beds and what trellis support I would need? |