Best of friends worst of enemies

Started by Tall Trees, March 02, 2004, 16:42:27

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Tall Trees

Well i was just planning to dig a bed at a time on my new allotment and plant the vegetables in date of planting order.

Are there any vegetables that dont like being next to each other or are seperate beds a small footpath apart suitable.

Tall Trees


allotment_chick

Hi Tall Trees - Bob Flowerdew suggests (amongst other things that I can't remember) that you don't plants garlic with Broad Beans - maybe the HDRA can help?
AC
Guardian of around 2,950 sq ft of the planet Earth

Mrs Ava

OKay, got Bobs book out and am typing this as I read thru.....

'Onions and beans mutually detest each other, peas do not get on well with onions'

'Leeks........may not get on well with broccoli'

'Brassicas......not with rue, lettuce or strawberries'; 'unhappy with runner beans'; 'Cauliflowers....strongly dislike tomatos and strawberries'

'Melons....do not like potatoes'

'Cucumbers....do not like potatoes and the feeling it mutual'

'Sweet or bell peppers....avoid Kohl Rabi'

Hope this info kinda helps.   :-\






Tall Trees

Thanks for the info i will not plant my onions in the bed next to the broad beans then just to be on the safe side.

Garden Manager

Hmm thats interesting EJ. Brassicas and lettuce together a no no.

Thing is I grew lettuce around my cabbages last year (as a sort of ground cover), and both did well (alright they did OK  ::) )

At that rate then if I keep them seperate this year the cabbages will do even better. Perhaps ? ...... :-\

Mrs Ava

Richard, I am merely quoting Bob Flowerdew.  

gavin

Hmmm!  Brassicas and lettuce a no-no?  Depends what you're planning for!

Lettuces - nope  (But I do grow a fair few in another bed!)
Slugs - good, big, fat, juicy ones, just as long as I know exactly where they are - on the lettuce!
Nice clean brassicas - without slug damage?  Yup.

All best - Gavin

gavin

Hi Tall Trees
QuoteWell i was just planning to dig a bed at a time on my new allotment and plant the vegetables in date of planting order.

Should I take this at face value?  If so, have a think about the different plant families, disease and pest susceptability, and rotation?

If I'm being too literal, apologies for being so stupid!!!!!!  ??? ??? ??? :)

All best - Gavin

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