Author Topic: What do you feel really confident about giving advice on..or not???  (Read 2548 times)

Jeannine

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 11,447
  • Mapleridge BC Canada
I realise this is a difficult question but I think it is worth an ask.

Some of us have been general gardeners for many years, others have greenfingers and  can grow anything when others struggle.

Some of us are are better at one veggie than another.

Some of us muddle through while others follow an established pattern.

Some of have no favourites while some have studied/researched a particular type of veggie,in much the same way rose growers have.

I am interested  in knowing who has made a particular veggie  a passion and do you feel confident that what they have learned is good enough to pass on to others.

I have a very big collection of tomatoes and know a great deal about varieties ,historys etc, however I do not feel I am an expert on growing them.

The same would be true of beans,

I would say the same about sweetcorn and , but am confident giving advice too.

When it comes to my squash however etc, I have studied these extensively  for decades, have grown and kept records of more that 400  varieties,  and I do feel very confident in giving help to newbies re types, yeild, planting, soil, spacing, taste, keeping qualities etc. While it may seem immodest I feel more than qualified to say this.

I am very interested to find who else on the site has made a a veggie a particuler passion.

Come on folks I have stuck my neck out, I know the British are not big on blowing their own trumpets but I think this is a very useful question,

Could I add, the people out there who are currently studying a particular veggie with passion to post too.

You don't need to consider yourself an expert,just be passionate.

XX Jeannine

When God blesses you with a multitude of seeds double  the blessing by sharing your  seeds with other folks.

Curryandchips

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 2,422
The only thing I feel confident about is ... not giving advice ... :)

Every year, I seem to have differing successes, so feel I don't have green fingers, it is nature's providence which gives me crops. I enjoy it though, and this is a great place to pick up ideas and alternative views ...
The impossible is just a journey away ...

quizzical1

  • Acre
  • ****
  • Posts: 391
  • Ceanothus in Northampton
    • My allotment and other garden related things
As there is generally no right ** or wrong way of doing most things gardening, (despite what all the books say) the only advice anyone can give is relative to their own experiences. You can try to follow all the advice you get from whatever source, but at the end of the day...
** the RIGHT way for you IS the way that works for you, and if it works for you, it may do so for others, so I would feel comfortable passing that information on.
Grow your own and enjoy the fruits of your labours,
Regards Alan.

http://achalmers-quizzical1.blogspot.com/

Dizzymac

  • Not So New ...
  • *
  • Posts: 20

I try to read a lot about all types of veggies that I grow and I'm trying now to write down in a book all the relevant tit bits that might be useful in an ordered way, as I find I forget them or get in a muddle about what advice goes with what veg.
And I've started a diary of when I should be doing things.

So quite often when I have posted my tips I tend to say, well I think this is right.........just in case someone comes back telling me I'm talking a load of rot.
Not that I really think anyone would do that on this site but there is always the first time!!!
But I do feel like you all know alot more than I do and I very much enjoy reading everyones comments.

Dizzy


tim

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 18,607
  • Just like the old days!
Advice on experience is not always valid. I may fall foul there.

Sweetcorn, for instance. What we grew with huge success 40 years ago does not read across to today. Every year, new varieties are the best & few of us have the time or spark to do controlled trials. And since every year & every plot of ground (some have shade & others don't & some you feed & some you don't) are different.

Mostly, though, procedures live on?

But it's fun, isn't it!

PS Before offering any help, DO READ what the last person said - maybe they offered just that. Or, at least, give them credit for it??





« Last Edit: May 24, 2007, 12:09:28 by tim »

David R

  • Acre
  • ****
  • Posts: 319
this is where this forum works you see, because everyone offers advice from their own experience, which, as Tim says doe'snt always work for everyone - however as there are so many people here giving slightly differnt takes, you can build up a "best fit" or consensus solution to help take the risk out.

Everyone is an expert once they have sucessfully grown and harvested a crop, because they have achieved the ultimate aim of what they were trying to do. Any experience can then be shared and added to the ever increasing pool of information.

Trevor_D

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 1,623
  • north-west London
However much you know, and however much experience you have, there's always someone who knows more. And what works for one person, or even one year, doesn't mean that's the "best" way. That's one of the joys of this forum: we're all trying to learn, and we all continue to make the most awful mistakes. But there's always someone to suggest a different way.

I thought I knew a reasonable bit about growing tomatoes until - on an earlier thread - I found out I was the merest amateur! I've always been able to produce broad beans earlier than my neighbouring plot-holders, until a newcomer last year - who had never grown a single vegetable in her life! - manged to be eating hers at least 3 weeks before mine!

But, as Tim says, it is fun!

Tee Gee

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 6,931
  • Huddersfield - Light humus rich soil
    • The Gardener's Almanac
I could not call my self an expert in anything! my motto is to 'know a little about a lot' and I find this helps me and also allows me to chip in my tuppence ha'porth when required.

If I were to plump for anything I would say Chrysanthemum & Dahlias but even here (as my results in shows tell) I am not expert but fairly knowledgable.

davyw1

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 2,530
  • I love My Country
I was trying to think about what ia actually know about gardening.
I can remember that when i started
GRASS    Was green stuff  that grew in the front garden
WEED     Was what i was told to get out of the grass
POT        Was what i transfered seedling into
SNORT    Was the sound a pig made
COKE      Was what i drank to refresh my thirst while gardening
HASH      Was Corned Beef with garden potato,s
CRACK    Was what i got for eating all the pea pods

Gosh how times have changed.
Davy
When you wake up on a morning say "good morning world" and be grateful

DAVY

manicscousers

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 16,474
  • www.golborne-allotments.co.uk
expert on nowt, just an enthusiastic amateur..if anyone asks, I'll give my experience of it..after that, try anything once and, if it works, it's ok, if not, try something different, that's the joy of growing things, for me  ;D

nell

  • Not So New ...
  • *
  • Posts: 21
 I agree with what quizzical1 and others have said - sharing experiences is all I'd be confident enough to do.  I think though that if I was going to choose one particular veg to specialise in - it'd be squash like Jeannine or maybe beans as they're so variable and collectable as well.  Specialising in say... turnips might be a bit limiting unless you're Baldrick .....lol
   (I really wish I'd read Tims p.s....about reading what other people have put before posting recently - I was mortified to have virtually written word for word what other people had written on one thread - apologies to all - I'll be reading what other people have put first from now on !)    

davyw1

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 2,530
  • I love My Country
I think gardening IS an experience, no matter how long we have been doing it there is always some thing more to be learned
This a brilliant site for passing ones alternative methods to less knowledgeable gardeners after all we all had to start some where. I new nothing about gardening when i started i even asked my mentor why do we grow all this veg in neat rows, the plants don,t know they are neat and tidy,  "just easier for hoeing David, thats all." Thick or what.
Gardening would be ideal if we all lived next to the person with the same interest in our particular choice of veg. Take Tee Gee he loves his Crysanths and Dahlias four gardens away from me is Paul harmer National Sprays Champion who works with John Peace, the National Chrysanth Champion Best in Show, next door Geof Craggs, Harrogate Show 2nd place. Today i was sitting having a coffee with an ex word record holder for leeks.
Its strange that we all have our own ineterests in different veg yet there is never anyone with an allotment near you that shares your intrest with whom you can swap ideas.
I try to set myself a target each year, this year it is long carrots and parsnips, and hopefully up at the top end of the bench with a pair of Leeks ( i should be so lucky )
Now to the question of wheather i feel confident enough to pass on my experiance to others, only on what i know about tried and tested methods,

When you wake up on a morning say "good morning world" and be grateful

DAVY

cleo

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 2,641
  • I love Allotments 4 All
I am happy to give what little knowledge I have about most things but am not an `expert`.

I am however passionate about tomatoes-my campaign to get people to stop growing MM and try something tasty instead is not all tounge in cheek.

I think most of us should feel confident that we have helped contribute to a site many of us trust and find a good a place to visit

emmy1978

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 2,360
  • It's good to be in my gardening shoes again!
At the moment, not a lot. I have greenish fingers for flowers and stuff, but Mother Nature seems to control my veg crop results. I enjoy sharing experiences and I think that's what a lot of gardening is about. We all have different soil, weather, turn of season and so we have to adapt any advice to suit us.
I just love gassing on A4A.  8)
Don't throw paper away. There is no away.

Lauren S

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 1,797
  • Delightful Devon
my campaign to get people to stop growing MM and try something tasty instead is not all tounge in cheek.

Ok I've sat at thought about this before asking, but cannot find anything that fits MM. So PLEASE somebody put me out of my misery and ignorance :(
Lauren
:) Net It Or You Won't Get It  :)

quizzical1

  • Acre
  • ****
  • Posts: 391
  • Ceanothus in Northampton
    • My allotment and other garden related things
I believe that they are refering to "MONEY MAKER" Tomatos.
I know that this particular variety is alleged to be a bit bland, tastewise, but I personally think that many of the  so called "giant" tomatos are even more bland.
« Last Edit: May 25, 2007, 11:47:03 by quizzical1 »
Grow your own and enjoy the fruits of your labours,
Regards Alan.

http://achalmers-quizzical1.blogspot.com/

Lauren S

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 1,797
  • Delightful Devon
OHHHHHHHHHH Thanks Quizz... ;D. I feel silly asking but I wouldn't have been able to sleep for not knowing  ;)
:) Net It Or You Won't Get It  :)

cleo

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 2,641
  • I love Allotments 4 All
Mea culpa-sorry. MM does indeed refer to Moneymaker. I am not saying that other varieties including some large ones are wonderful but there are so many varieties that are just as easy to grow that taste better

kt.

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 4,805
  • Teesside
I am happy giving advice on what has worked for me. Though I also try new ideas & varieties on part of my crop that members have posted on here. You can never know everything.
All you do and all you see is all your life will ever be

RobinOfTheHood

  • Hectare
  • *****
  • Posts: 1,005
  • South Yorks
Computers!   ::) :'( :-\
I hoe, I hoe, then off to work I go.

http://tapnewswire.com/

 

SimplePortal 2.3.5 © 2008-2012, SimplePortal