so far I have lost carrots (admittedly expected this, they were a bit of an experiment to show middle daughter how things grow!), courgettes(suspect too long in pots, but they were large pots?!), pumpkins (think birds got them!) and as for my sunflowers - well the ones my son brought home frompreschool are more successful!!!
Am I too late for all of the above to start from scratch? I have been given one of those 3 tier min greenhouses for the garden so I can look after my babies properly now, in the absence of a "proper" greenhouse this year!
Thanks!
My disaster were the Tumbler Tom Tomatoes ...only one germinated ! All the other types I tried came up ,cant understand why these didn,t ..and once again ..they were blooming expensive !!! Rohaise >:(
yes you can sow all of them still, carrots into August even. remember that as summer is coming on, greenhouses - even those ones with the plastic cover - I have one, can be too hot for seedlings. Once they've germinated, let them grow on outside, or keep the cover open on your 3 tier thing. Maybe still keep a watch for cold nights with the squashes - tho when your next batch germinate, we should be free from frost etc
We are still sowing like mad...
;D
I know the feeling Barbara :'( I've lost my courgettes too!! How long does everyone wait after germination before they plant them out. It's my first time growing veggies and I was gutted when I saw they were dying, my poor babies :(
Iff you can find some space get some thing in it. Done this today for Carrots to go in tomorrow
(http://i142.photobucket.com/albums/r111/stumpinsci/Picture062-1.jpg)
Have just had to sow french beans again, I knew I should have used the little blue pellets......(was away for a week and the damage was done by the time I got back ::))
my beans were shredded as they were hardening off on the deck, not by snails, by the wind. so sowed a whole lot more last week which are back on the window sill now.
my courgettes in pots are just throwing up baby bloomettes all over the place, and I've still to dig the bed up at the lottie yet. hope they don't mind being transplanted when they're so big! ::)
My sweetcorn and dwarf french beans have been devastated by the wind we had last week. Sowed replacement beans direct into the soil and will sow more sweetcorn later today indoors.
I have sown everything in peat pots, cos I'm fed up of washing out plant pots,seed trays etc, and I said to them 'I will go and prepare a place for you'! So am off to lotty to dig up weeds.
Been very lazy this year and have only sown toms in peat pots. All others are getting chucked directly into the allotment - beans, courgettes etc. Last year I spent a lot of time and energy on squash and corn and lost the lot of them when I planted. Had to re-sow anyway. :'(
Have cheated and bought cheapo seedlings - leeks, ps broccoli and cabbages.
Ah. What you need is a mother - not any mother, but MY mother. Being recently retired, she's started growing things from seed for me (100 dwarf french beans went in a few weeks ago...!) and is really very good at it.
Personally, I have managed to keep the following alive and growing: cabbages x 2 types, sprouts, leeks, spring onions, chillies, sorrel (an astonishing success!)
Those that are on a knife edge between this life and the next: lettuces, tomatoes, some of the chillies, basil.
Things I won't even bother to try at home until I get a greenhouse: sweetcorn, tomatoes, hot house vegetables, herbs.
The direct sow plants so far are: beetroot, peas, runner beans, perpetual spinach - all of which are doing well left to their own devices. Additional direct sow will be butternut squash & courgettes.
There's nothing wrong with plug plants - there are several on my plot already!
we've lost 2 rows of peas and we started these off at home under mini greenhouse, they were big enough to go out but something has had them at least got one good row, with loads of weeds coming through it's a job for saturday unless it rains.
because of my accident i was miles behind this year so every thing has gone in late and i,m going to plant late next year cuz i,v found things grow a lot faster and stronger!! i,v never had carrots appear so fast and i,v noticed others R beans that are a foot higher than mine looking windblown and poorly the same for sweetcorn
when we first had our lotty in a hot july we cleared a small patch and sowed R beans which belted up and we were still picking in october.it is only may after all
and some years we are still having frosts and plants seem to know when to grow
i think gardening magazines rush in and panic gardeners into planting too early
marg
I've lost a vast number of seedlings to very hungry snails. :( Lettuces, carrots, courgette, beans, brassicas, etc.
Last year my mini green house was blown over and I lost lots of seedlings. I had to sow almost all tomatoes and chillies. Do weigh it down with lots of bricks or something.
I think you can still sow them, Barbara. I'm still sowing pumpkins. ;)
Tora I put 2 bricks in the bottom of my mini g'house and tied the cover round under the bottom and over the top with a piece of string. It stayed put. ;)
Emagggie, you are very wise! ;) I thought the weight of pots on the mini green house was heavy enough and the disaster happened! :-[ Sadly my mini green house has now become a 'plant shelf' after losing the cover due to gales. :D I'd love to have a proper green house one day!
As its confession time I have to admit having a bit of a bad year with Peas & Runner beans (French ones OK)
Just as well I prefer them to runners!!
I too have lost a lot for various reasons, wind, baking them, insects,poor germination and a two year old who likes to dig my seedlings out >:( :( :'( ;D ;D ;D
sugar snaps..everything else ok :)
Quote from: Tora on May 22, 2007, 17:03:03
.Sadly my mini green house has now become a 'plant shelf' after losing the cover due to gales.
Erm...don't mean to bang on about the mini g/h but I bought a replacement cover at our local garden centre for £5 approx. I use it as an overflow from small 'proper' g/h, then a place to harden off plants. Without said cover of course. ;D
Lupins all scoffed since I put them out >:(
where have all the slgs and snails come from this year..must be the mild weather..they're getting on my ruddy nerves !!! >:(
and the greenfly, whitefly and cutworms..why do I bother? :)
i grew 2 r/trainer full of sugar snaps and they were slugged and my winter cabbages were a disaster all full of holes and it wasn,t skyrats as they were netted
our slimy enemies just kept chomping and breeding all through the winter it seems
i,v got a G/h which is my little heaven but still use the coverless mini for hardening off plants thinking of taking it apart for G/H shelving tho
marg
Someone very kindly sent me some Yard Long bean seeds. They germinated but the slugs and snails have eaten all but two of the plants.
I've taken to floating my lettuce and chinese veggies in polstyrene cells in a water butt ;D
Quite a lot of my seedlings went a bit leggy as the germination window sill is west facing. They seem to have done well once potted on though, I lose about 10-20% through natural causes and careless handling.
My FIL gave us a 3-tier plastic greenhouse and they've been going great guns in that, against a west facing wall in the back garden. the courgettes loved it in there.
That said, the toms are getting too big for it now, is it too soon to plant them out?
:'(
Just got back from the plot to find ALL the seedlings i transplanted have died.
They were looking fine monday, a little wilted yesterday and dead today :'(
I have lost 2 trays of swede and lettuce and my tomatos look like there heading the same way!
I can only imagine that with the heat and the wind that they got scorched :'(
I am going up to the plot tomorrow and going to sow seeds directly in place rather than start them off again in trays.
But i have 3 trays of onions that are 2 inches high which i want to transplant do you think they might be OK?
Cambourne7
Having been sooooo thrilled at managing to get carrots to germinate at last, I now find that Mr. s**ding Mole has been very busy and disrupted the lot.
Aaarrrrrggggggghhh.........
Emaggie i am sending you a cyber hug to see if that helps..
Quote from: Emagggie on May 22, 2007, 21:21:59
Quote from: Tora on May 22, 2007, 17:03:03
.Sadly my mini green house has now become a 'plant shelf' after losing the cover due to gales.
Erm...don't mean to bang on about the mini g/h but I bought a replacement cover at our local garden centre for £5 approx. I use it as an overflow from small 'proper' g/h, then a place to harden off plants. Without said cover of course. ;D
I had two covers (nylon? and fleece ), both of which were torn in pieces by strong wind so I gave up. ::) If I find a cheap replacement cover I will still be tempted to buy it though. :D
Thanks Cam, it does ;D
Re. your onions, I let mine get to about 4" before launching them into the big wide lottie world, they seem to be struggling on slowly but they are still there. Not sure whether I did the right thing, perhaps a seasoned onion grower can point us in the right direction.
Shame about the rest though. :(
mmm kind of agree with the post about late sowing. my friend who is excellent gardener keeps saying "oh I haven't sown that yet" about most things but his veg are always great. I put in lots of stuff in late March early April and most of it either didn't sprout or was completely devastated in the subsequent cold snap. I re sowed peas last week because the first ones were just pathetic. All the resowing I did in May seems to have been successful though, must have been the rain, even the parsnips are looking good.
funny about so many of you saying the peas are rubbish, I was so looking forward to a bumper crop but looks like I might have to wait till next year for that.
Lost rows of French Beans, PSB, Broccoletto, Carrots & Beetroot to my hippo sized slugs! :'( :'( :'( (Consequently my plot now looks empty!!
On my way up there this afternoon to see what else they have dined on during the week, hopefully not my healthy looking runners that I put in!!
Still plenty of time to sow tho, was just hoping to be ahead of the game this year, see you plan, and mother nature puts a stop to it! ;D
Disastrous year for beans.... 48 dwarf Kenyan beans and 48 borlotti in and only three Kenyan appeared. Post mortem revealed an absence of beans in the pots, the rest taken by mice. :(
Replacements going in propagator this weekend with an anti mouse brick on top.
Frustrating but not the end of the world.
My spuds are a bit of a disaster area; those that have come up are looking good, but I used a different seed source, got them very late, and a lot haven't emerged at all.
We've lost a few of several things, as you do. But the real disasters were early runner bens, planted out too early and scorched by the wind. They've since been replaced.
And :( my first planting of celery have all had it. I've not grown celery before, and was already down to only three survivors, and they got overheated last week and have died.
There's another tray of them coming on, but the second lot are still very tiny. Better luck this time, I hope.