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GYO editorial assistant with a growing question for you to answer!

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  • GYO editorial assistant with a growing question for you to answer!

    Hi there growers! My name is Rose and I am the new editorial assistant at Grow Your Own. To introduce myself, I thought I'd get stuck in by asking you all a quick question. Answers might even be featured in March's issue in our allotment inspirations page! The question is, when winter is over, what spring job in the garden excites you the most? Responses could include what you like to grow, or any other jobs you love getting stuck into when spring has finally sprung! I can't wait to hear your thoughts.

    All best,

    Rose

  • #2
    I'm not the first person to have looked at your question, Rose, but I'm amazed I'm the first person to answer: sowing seeds.

    Lots of twitchy fingers and plenty of people with their propagators already out by the look of the threads.

    Comment


    • #3
      Mo job as such,but love to have a look around for what is peeping through the soil,buds on shrubs and fruit bushes,the soil just nice to pull out weeds,it's the exitement of another new season off hope.
      sigpicAnother nutter ,wife,mother, nan and nanan,love my growing places,seed collection and sharing,also one of these

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      • #4
        Hello and welcome to the vine Rose

        The job I like best is giving my greenhouse a good spring clean to start off the new growing season.
        Location....East Midlands.

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        • #5
          Welcome along...

          I personally like clearing some space for the heated propagator and the grow lights - dodging my wife's objections to seed trays on the windowsills and getting the seeds to germinate...
          sigpic
          1574 gin and tonics please Monica, large ones.

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          • #6
            March Hopefully by now I I'm finishing the overwinter infrastructure jobs and finally brushing off my two portable LED grow stations that I have in my man cave / broom cupboard home office and getting an early start on germinating seedlings that can then go out into the Grow Station out in the brick shed constructed over the small under the counter freezer. My only wish is that I had more space or my little Triffids permission to remover her ornaments off the window ledges and replace with small propagators.
            sigpic
            . .......Man Vs Slug
            Click Here for my Diary and Blog
            Nutters Club Member

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            • #7
              Hi Rose and welcome. You have the perfect name for a gardening magazine.

              Spring to me means clearing the greenhouse staging ready for all the seedlings that I'll have been growing on in the house since January, like tomatoes. Starting cucumbers, courgettes and beans and wandering around the garden enjoying the spring flowers.
              Its my favourite time of the year.

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              • #8
                For me, getting the propagator on the go is a winter job getting ready for spring and likewise digging the vegetable beds over. Although today was a tad chilly up here to start with, it turned spring like mid morning and I headed in to my allotment(26 miles each way). I spent 2½hours hours tidying up. No real organisation about it. I started at the top of the plot and first of all removed the remnants of last years clabrese plants. The soft foliage went in to the compost bin, the stems were set aside to get smashed up a bit with a big hammer before they go into the compost bin and the roots were bagged up ready to go to the tip. Roots to the tip because there is a problem with clubroot in the plot.

                I then moved down a bit and set about tidying up last years chrysanthemum plants. I'm a novice with them - well they are flowers and you can't eat them, but I do want to propagate some young plants from the new growth.

                Final job was to get the hoe going in among the new strawberry plants. We had tremendous weed growth at the tail end of the year as nature caught up after the arid summer. All in all the areas I had worked on were left looking ship shape and that is such a good feeling.

                I've had to commit to doing some work in and around the house tomorrow so no more plotting this week but if the weather holds I'll manage another couple of sessions next week
                Last edited by Aberdeenplotter; 09-01-2019, 04:36 PM.

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                • #9
                  Welcome to the vine
                  I wish you all the best in your new job.

                  I do not want to be featured in the magazine.
                  But I enjoy seed sowing and getting the tunnels ready for a new season.

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                  • #10
                    Hi Rose and welcome to the Vine
                    Always look forward to topping the no-dig beds with home made compost. A lot of hard work and care goes into making the compost and it's such a reward to see it finally put to use.
                    Location ... Nottingham

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                    • #11
                      March for me is putting in my spuds. They are the first thing that go in the ground for me, so that always marks the start of the actual season for me.

                      p.s. forgot to say - good luck with the magazine

                      I'm not sure how possible it is, but could we have some more long-term features? Each month people do things, and we don't seem to come back to them. Might be nice to see how, eg the various garden DIY projects fared in the garden
                      Last edited by bikermike; 10-01-2019, 10:46 AM.

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                      • #12
                        As with all my gardening exploits I just ad-lib them. I have a broad plan of what I am going to do that day but rarely stick to the plan.

                        Spring to me means I can do my ad-libbing in a tee shirt rather than a topcoat.
                        My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order
                        to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE)

                        Diversify & prosper


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                        • #13
                          Early Spring is for filling every vacant sunny spot in the house, greenhouse & cold frames with seed trays. Nothing more exciting in gardening to my mind than seeing the emergence of seedlings and the expectation of what they may become. Summer is for watching it all turn to pants

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                          • #14
                            I'm usually still planning layout and what will be sown where, and although those well laid plans never get fully implemented either, it is such a joy to stand on the plot with a plan in mind and seeds in hand. And let's not forget having a cuppa on the allotment with the sunshine hitting your face, drinking in the warmth and the hope of the new season
                            https://nodigadventures.blogspot.com/

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                            • #15
                              Everyone is out with propagators and seeds, but you know spring is here when you've cleared out the Strawberry beds, add BFB and ready to lay the straw mulch. Then just a few more weeks to the 1st Strawberries.

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