Best way to start my peas

Started by JJ, April 23, 2013, 22:00:51

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telboy

I'm with Gavin's original reply. Did two 30' triple rows today. Don't have mice probs. so looking forward to a healthy crop.
Eskimo Nel was a great Inuit.

telboy

Eskimo Nel was a great Inuit.

Paulines7

I start mine off indoors on the working surface in a utility room and currently have some in jiffy7's and some in an ice cream carton in compost and vermiculite .  Because the weather has been so cold though, I haven't been able to plant them out. 

They already have flowers on and there are also some pods that have developed already!  I was going to plant them out yesterday but then I noticed a frost was due. Once they are planted, I will start off a few more.  The ones in the ice cream carton have done just as well as the jiffy ones so I won't use the jijjy's for peas in future as they are expensive to buy.

chriscross1966

I was planning on planting out the first wrinkle-seeded sowings this weekend, but as mentioned above the temperatures drove me to keep them in the sheltered bit behind the greenhouse.... I have sown another tray of each Hurst Greenshaft and Ne PLus Ultra today, so that's another 5 feet of each.... might well get some more Telefono going soon, and possibly a load more HGS, I need to work out what's going where, but if I can spare another 20 foot row for peas then it's a no-brainer as far as I'm concerned, I love peas....

Robert_Brenchley

My wrinkle-seeded peas are coming up very happily under cover.

Vinlander

If you have really hungry mice then you want to get the pea plants so big that the seed is worn-out and tasteless.

Guttering is a bit too shallow for this and dries out too quickly for me (and it's a pig to water when it's dry - though it helps if you include some soil in the mix to aid wetting).

Pots are too fiddly - unless you are growing the 6- footer Alderman types 10mm or more apart.

The best trick is to remove the two long thin sides from 1L juice 'bricks' so you have a long deep bottomless pot - 5 will fit neatly in a standard drip tray, and then they are really easy to water.

I put 9 peas in each and when they are 150-200mm high I space each 'pot'  to make 1m of row from each tray - it's the work of seconds and you don't even have to remove the pots (unless you want to re-use them) as all the roots go straight out the bottom.

It's so easy it's worth using as your standard method - mice or no mice - especially for the first 2 or 3 sowings (though I skip the first sowing of really dwarf varieties and plant direct a little later).

It's also good for starting dwarf french beans - and 6pint milk containers make a larger pot for climbing french that fit 4 to a tray.

Cheers.
With a microholding you always get too much or bugger-all. (I'm fed up calling it an allotment garden - it just encourages the tidy-police).

The simple/complex split is more & more important: Simple fertilisers Poor, complex ones Good. Simple (old) poisons predictable, others (new) the opposite.

kippers garden

I grow mine in short pieces of guttering as this way the mice don't eat all the seeds.  You can see pictures of how I prepare the guttering and sow the peas in the guttering here:

http://notjustgreenfingers.wordpress.com/2013/03/25/peas-soup-and-a-frozen-yoghurt-recipe/

...and also how to get them out of the guttering here:

http://notjustgreenfingers.wordpress.com/2013/04/19/how-to-get-peas-out-of-guttering-and-my-bean-trenches/

Hope this helps
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