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BahamaMama
Joined: 21 Sep 2006 Posts: 2315 Location: Away with the fairies
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mbeirnes
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BahamaMama
Joined: 21 Sep 2006 Posts: 2315 Location: Away with the fairies
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mbeirnes
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 100
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tahir
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 45668 Location: Essex
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gil Downsizer Moderator
Joined: 08 Jun 2005 Posts: 18415
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nettie
Joined: 02 Dec 2004 Posts: 5888 Location: Suffolk
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Posted: Sat Mar 28, 09 3:11 am Post subject: |
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Successional sowing works great if you have a greenhouse or sunny shed windowsill to get things going. Sow in trays or modules, plant out a month later (frost permitting), and re-sow straight away. Have three stages on the go for salads: one you are sowing (in greenhouse), one you are growing (in greenhouse/cold frame) , and one you are eating (in beds or pots outside)
Just mark the first weekend of each month in your diary to sow and plant out Its when you sow some indoors and some of the same thing outdoors that things get complicated, this year i am going to start nearly everything off indoors regardless of time of year (helps to protect them from slugs and birds too!) I expect i'll run out of time later in the season and chuck a few seeds in direct and see what happens though!
I would be more inclined to succession-sow on hardy crops such as peas, leeks, brassicas, than i would on tender ones, as their productive season is longer (as long as you get the last ones in by July!) Later on in Spring I'll switch to sowing different varieties so I can get the winter ones under way.
I'd just do the one sowing of toms, chillis, courgettes, runners etc, only doing a second if some fail to germinate. The only exception to this might be French beans, who seem to crop all at once. Keep some toms in at the end of May and put some out, the indoor ones will crop earlier, you should get a good run through most of the summer. Your toms should keep producing trusses till you have to pinch out the tops - and in our climate they take an age to ripen anyway. Chillies will crop twice indoors, and keep going till November, although the second crop won't be as big as the first.
Parsnips i would do one sowing and leave in; Carrots I would go for a couple of varieties that will see me through the seasons, you can't start them indoors. Chard, oriental salad leaves, and rocket especially do well over winter as cut-and-come-again - just make sure they are in the ground by July, August at latest.
Good luck with whatever you decide to do! |
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BahamaMama
Joined: 21 Sep 2006 Posts: 2315 Location: Away with the fairies
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OtleyLad
Joined: 13 Jan 2007 Posts: 2737 Location: Otley, West Yorkshire
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