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Hi
I had been given a small courgette plant in a pot which I have been growing on my kitchen window over the weekend. It was growing leaves at a rapid rate and so I decided yesterday to plant it out in the garden.. In terms of the ground outside, our soil is very stony, hard and clay like. So I dug a trench about half a foot deep and then filled the trench with multi purpose compost. I watered the compost and I then planted it in the middle of this compost and put some slug pellets around, I then watered it again last thing at night.. However, since I planted it out, it doesn't seem to have grown at all, have I done something wrong! ![]() How quickly should it grow and produce folwers and courgettes? Any help would be welcomed!.. ![]() |
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Don't worry about feeding it until it is producing. Only water if it is dry, courgettes go limp if they are thirsty - a good soaking every few days is better than a dribble every day as it encourages the roots to dig down and find water thus giving a stronger plant.
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Hi
It won't have grown overnight - you have changed its growing conditions without it getting used to being outside. Plus it is colder outside than inside. Just water it during the evening [avoiding the leaves if you can], on a really hot day and every other evening when it isn't so hot. If it looks a bit wilty, you can water it a bit more. Use tomato feed once a week once it has fruit. Edited to add: bingo! or is it snap.
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Andrea :wavehello http://www.growfruitandveg.co.uk/gra...logs/zazen999/ moon trial underway with onions, lettuce, tomatoes and calabrese. Last edited by zazen999 : 14-05-2008 at 10:47 AM. |
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For future reference (I hate it when someone says that to me!) it's best to let a plant acclimatise to outdoor conditions. You do this by putting it outide in the day and bringing it back in at night for a week or 10 days. Then leave it out all the time for another few days (unless there's a frost forecast). By this time it's virtually coping out there on its own anyway. Then you plant it out. In the meanwhile, if it seems to have outgrown its accommodation a bigger pot is in order. (Whoops, got the i and the u mixed up first time round in the pot size there!)
As it is, it will need a few days to get used to it. Must be like being born - all that cosy warm darkness then they shove you out into the noisy, cold light!
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Some days you're the statue, some days you're the pigeon! vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated July 6th 2008 |
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Where are you in the country Goodlife ? It's quite early for courgettes to be planted out. I'm still putting mine out during the day and bringing them in at night. I have sometimes put them out early in the past, but I covered them with fleece at night. Maybe you could try that.
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From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs. |
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As Flummery said, you need to harden off everything that is going to be plunged from inside to outside ... you'd sulk too if you were plucked from your nice warm sitting room and dumped into a cold, windy garden.
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I came, I saw, I planted |
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OK, I think I may have failed.. I understand all the advice about introducing to the outside world and I will do that next time. However, now, although a few little leaves are growing, the leaves that are already fully grown are droopy and limp.. I thought someone said that would be due to needing water but it's rained so much here that I don;t think lack of water has been a problem.. What can I do!?!..
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