Have you started on you 2011 vegetable garden plan yet?

Started by longalot, August 15, 2010, 20:46:14

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Have you started on you 2011 vegetable garden plan yet?

yes
18 (48.6%)
no
19 (51.4%)

Total Members Voted: 37

longalot

Have you started on you 2011 vegetable garden plan yet?

longalot


:(

Yes I just got a second plot a couple of weeks ago so clearing and planning going on.

And the Kings NSALG discount catalogue arrived so planning the order too.

chriscross1966

Yep, I've bought the big onion seed I'll grow (Aislae) and also the overwintering broad beans and spring onions. Will have to do seed-box audit soon....plus need to have plan A: 1 plot and garden and B: 2 plots and garden (if I get another plot on the site I'm on now).....

chrisc

Digeroo

Very essential to plan the next year early.  Each time I clear a bed I need to know what is going in next so it has the right treatment.  I have normally moved my beans round but due to manure contamination they will have to be a fixture for a while.   The worst affected areas are scheduled for sweet corn.  I am expanding the areas for strawberries and fruit.  The areas for PSB are already planned and the plants well established.
 
It was all very carefully planned this year but due to the contamination lots of things had to be moved.  I suddenly had to dig new bean trenches and raid the compost heap.

elvis2003

yes,always start planning next year at this time of year,particularly thinking about any diseases that have reared their ugly faces. we have also taken on next doors half plot,as they have recently quit,so we now have a full plot yahoooooo!
when the going gets tough,the tough go digging

cleo

I have started inasmuch as buying the over wintering broad beans and peas,the patch for next year`s onions has had a garlic drench and the path I take to the new compost bin will be well trodden down for the sprouts

Mrs Gumboot

Wish I could, however, the garden needs some serious work over the winter to give me the veg plot I'm planning. Depends on a) how bad the winter is, b) what I find when I start lifting slabs c) with baby on the way I don't know when I'm going to have the energy or time and d) when the OH is going to be willing to help me lift said slabs, which are 3inch thick york stone  :o

Determined not to do everything in buckets again next year, but having to content myself currently with planning where the beds will go rather than what will go in them!

Bah humbug!!

shirlton

We have put labels on sticks this year so that we remember  what was growing there. We replant quite lot of stuff as we take things out so we dont have to plan very much.
When I get old I don't want people thinking
                      "What a sweet little old lady"........
                             I want em saying
                    "Oh Crap! Whats she up to now ?"

Duke Ellington

I take loads of photos of my plot each summer. I find it really useful especially as the photos are date stamped. Its good to look back at what was growing where when and how big they were at the time.

Duke :)
dont be fooled by the name I am a Lady!! :-*

goodlife

As I'm aiming to grow fresh food all year round, I have to think far ahead..
So yes...seeds are on going thing..buying, swapping etc. ;D
Previous crops are all marked in my little book..and new crops pre-marked where I might grow them.. ::)...untill somebody offers something exciting to try again ::) ;)

Trevor_D

It's on my list of jobs, honest.....

(I've normally sorted it by now, but it's been a busy year!)


tomatoada

I have planned what I hope to grow in each bed to make sure of 3 year rotation.
I am planning to grow more tall peas.  My Alderman and purple podded cropped well and were easy to pick.
Less runner beans and courgettes.
Onions from seed as well as sets.  Teegees advice.
Strawberries planted thro' weed fabric.  My neighbours did better than mind with this method.
My biggest problem is deciding which catalogue to use for my seed order.   I would like 3 or 4 out of each but this means several postage charges.

Flighty

longalot have you, and if so then then do tell us about it.

I haven't, and won't in detail until early next year.
Flighty's plot,  http://flightplot.wordpress.com,  is my blog.

I support the Gardening with Disabilities Trust, http://www.gardeningwithdisabilitiestrust.org.uk

longalot


Nikita77

Have started planning but this allows me to change it over and over again, when i first got my allotment i must have drawn 4 different plans and then it was all changed at the last minute.

Digeroo

Quotei finished my plan yesterday

So come on spill the beans and tell us a little of your plans.

chriscross1966

Quote from: tomatoada on August 16, 2010, 19:55:09
I have planned what I hope to grow in each bed to make sure of 3 year rotation.
I am planning to grow more tall peas.  My Alderman and purple podded cropped well and were easy to pick.
Less runner beans and courgettes.
Onions from seed as well as sets.  Teegees advice.
Strawberries planted thro' weed fabric.  My neighbours did better than mind with this method.
My biggest problem is deciding which catalogue to use for my seed order.   I would like 3 or 4 out of each but this means several postage charges.

Check on ebay and join in some seed swaps..... for instance I'll certainly be able to cover you for courgettes and  onion seed..... I go for a bigger rotation though. Potatoes is one, Onions is two, Squashes is three Brassicas is four, peas and beans is five and roots is six. Exotics like sweetcorn go wherever there is space.....

Next year I'll grow more tall peas and try adn overwinter some Meteors to get a really early crop, use Sutton to try nand cover the gap from Aquadulce to red flowered broadies (I love broad beans), try to give the shelling beans, especially the climbers, a better start in life regarding moisture-retention soil (and maybe autowatering systems) I want to have some success with parsnips too...... and fewer potato varieties, and fewer tomato varieties but more of the ones I've found to be good, especially the cookers, and better peppers, I've found the varieties I want now to grow them in large quantities.....and some sanity with courgettes would be good... I'm, a single bloke and OK, I'm a vegetarian, but fourteen courgette plants is too many...... and I'm not growing Boston Marrow squash again.... the things too big.......

chrisc

Jeannine

Come on lets hear  all those plans.

I always get inspired by other folks ideas.

Mine well, more or less..I started the squash last week,got to get an early start on them. ;D

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

Spudbash

Not sure if you'd call my plans inspired, Jeannine, but I've been trying to select interesting seed varieties at reduced prices, keeping in mind the need to make next year's crops a bit more manageable.

For instance, this year, I've grown lots of tomatoes in pots and was sensible about choosing varieties for different culinary purposes, but they are all cordon varieties and it has been very time-consuming tying them in and making sure the wind doesn't blow them over. Next year I will probably plant more varieties, putting the cordon varieties in the veg patch and the bush varieties in pots.

It will be interesting to try to accommodate the many squash and pumpkin varieties I've acquired since signing up to A4A, including the ones you kindly sent me. Thanks again! :)

I have also decided to take a leaf from your book by offering to share the contents of my seed packets with others.   :)

Otherwise, I haven't given next year too much thought and I'm still trying to make the most of this year. Being in the south of England, I'm going to try a few late sowings and see what comes up.....

Spudbash

Robert_Brenchley

The only plan I've got so far is to mulch like mad with autumn leaves. That way if we get another bad winter, I won't get behind!

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