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| New Shoots Get a helping hand with advice for novice gardeners... |
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| You can plant an over-wintering garlic now and I don't think you're too late for japanese onions either. In November you could give broad bean aquadulce claudia a go. In a decent year most will get through and they'll give you a crop a few weeks earlier than spring sown ones. You could also try some daffs and cut yourself some bunches of flowers in spring!
__________________ Earth laughs in flowers. Ralph Waldo Emerson www.vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated November 17th - The Big Dig |
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| As Dobby says, it depends on you growing conditions as to whether you start broadies out under cover. They're pretty tough and not having his rabbit problems, I just bung them in the ground.
__________________ Earth laughs in flowers. Ralph Waldo Emerson www.vegheaven.blogspot.com Updated November 17th - The Big Dig |
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| Remember to think about what you will be sowing or planting in that place in the spring or summer. Many of the crops you could sow now would still be in place in early to mid spring, so you need to co-ordinate the timing carefully. Over-wintering crops are sometimes not finished until April or May - check your varieties. If you have loads of beds, this is not a problem, of course - you can be wildly reckless! |
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| Sowed broad beans & beat spinach couple of weeks or so ago in mini greenhouse The broad beans are nearly ready for planting out. the spinach will be ready for planting in about two weeks I did my broad beans at the same time last year & started harvesting in May ![]()
__________________ I cook with wine, sometimes I even add it to the food. W. C. Fields |
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Seems a shame to leave most of the plot empty 







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