gardening year 2012

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rowlandwells

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gardening year 2012
« on: September 19, 2012, 19:04 »
   coming to the end of this gardening year the nights are drawing in and its getting much cooler at nights having to put a little heating on at night

on reflection how have you done this growing season because its pretty disappointing for most on our Lottie holders  no one seems to have any decent brassicas i planted brassicas  twice without any success although my plants are all bench grown it was a complete waste of time  a bit of a mixed bag of what has actually done any good on the Lottie's  this year its probably one of the werst seasons i have had on the Lottie since i started down there some thirty years  :mad:

but maybe you have had better results than us depending on what part of the country you live have you achieved you goal this season on the Lottie  despite the weather   

i went down the Lottie to scuffle the ground and tidy up  i was so surprised how hard the ground was i had to put weights on the scuffle to get it to go into the ground to get any depth of siol the ground seem to have got so wet and now its dried out like concrete >:(

 ime looking to ploughing the ground soon to overwinter hopefully we may have a better 2013 season to have another go ???




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Madame Cholet

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #1 on: September 19, 2012, 19:16 »
I'm in Northants too and have done well for a first season,  not huge surplusses but enough for 2 of us, put it down to being on top of the hill and inheriting a plot which has been well worked. I'm eating french beans a few courgettes, onions spinach carrots and beetroot, plenty of that. Looking ok brussel sprouts, leeks, psb, j articjokes, kale, caulis, oca, winter radish, parsnips and perp spinach.
Going in soon wizzard beans ow onions, garlic and sorrel plants.
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rowlandwells

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #2 on: September 19, 2012, 21:15 »
well done cholet i take my hat off to you my plot is situated at the bottom of a hill and i had water standing on parts the Lottie that  had never happened  since i took the ground on many years ago :mellow:

i put loads of manure on the ground through the winter months ready for spring setting  but all we had of the Lottie this year was a good crop of strawberries  broad beans beetroot  peas and at present picking a fair crop of raspberries  :)

some of the veg you mention i don't grow anyway mainly just the bas sics my daughter who lives NR Wellingborough really had some good veg crops of her Lottie that she gave us  and ime supposed to be the gardener learning her :ohmy:

not to be downhearted i have set 5 varieties of onion seeds in trays to overwinter so fingers crossed we get onions next year both spring and bulbing :unsure:

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Christine

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #3 on: September 22, 2012, 18:30 »
To my surprise the season has only been 50% disaster though it hasn't felt like it most of the time. It's not the first disaster of a season I've had since I took the plot on in 2007 when the soil was so hammered it was fit to grow nothing.

At least I had crops growing and weeds weeded out when the inspection committee came round at the start of August and the hedges all cut.  :D


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muckshifter

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #4 on: September 23, 2012, 09:41 »
Bit up and down here in Essex,spuds were the worst for me as our allotment site was under 2 feet of flood water on 3 occasions this year and my first and second plantings of spuds rotted in the ground the third lot grew and bless my soul,  :mad: we then got blight.
Had to re sow a few other things destroyed by the floods.
On the up side last Saturday was our local flower show,got 2 thirds 4 seconds and 11 firsts (including spuds under 225g) all in all enough to win most points in the veg classes and win the veg cup again :).
Not such a bad season but lots of extra work and a smaller than usual harvest.
« Last Edit: September 23, 2012, 09:47 by muckshifter »

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mumofstig

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #5 on: September 23, 2012, 09:58 »
Potatoes poor, early brassicas poor but later ones ok, so far.
Peas were fine but runner & Frenchbeans started late and finished early.

Swede is showing how dry we are here atm, garlic was very rusty but bulbs were a fair size :) The leeks have moth of some kind so I've cut the tops off, hoping for them to regrow :(

Sweetcorn was late but a fair crop but the squash have a poor yield this year, inspite of barrow loads of manure ::

Tomatoes have struggled in the greenhouse but peppers were good! Don't mention aubergines  :blink:

Strawberries were useless, but raspberries have been great :)

So a very mixed year, but not a complete failure either......................

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LilacSandy

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #6 on: September 23, 2012, 12:24 »
No aubergines, very poor tomatoes, great chilli and peppers.

So so potatoes, great runner beans & sweet peas.

No sweetcorn, great Broad beans

Good garlic crop, onions OK but not so big as last year.

Cauliflower rubbish as usual (but that is because I cannot grow them). Early carrot -rubbish
mid season - good, late season - rubbish. 

No swede or turnip, direct sown parsnip - rubbish,  pre-germinated - great.

No apples, great rhubarb, wonderful raspberries both summer and autumn.  Poor gooseberry crop, poor black current, good red current. Dismal plums.  Plenty of squash but on the small side

Very mixed bag this year

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Auntiemogs

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #7 on: September 23, 2012, 16:12 »
Climbing French beans great, runners pretty poor, aubs good, toms (well, If I never see another one... ::)), overwinter onions good, garlic ok, squash not so good, courgettes poor, peppers good, cues good, most fruit not so good but first year so wasn't expecting much, PSB looks good but too much space needed for too long so will try calabrese next year... :)
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angelavdavis

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #8 on: September 23, 2012, 20:37 »
It has been a bit of a mixed bag this year on our plot.

PSB planted as small plants grown in 9 cm pots, were planted out in September last year and haven't produced anything at all - they are now 6 foot high and I am going to take them all out and compost them as I am sick of looking at them now!

On the plus side, we have had a good few kilo of runner beans, french beans, stacks of courgettes of every shape and size.  We have also done well with chard, carrots, spinach, leeks, beetroot, turnips, radishes, strawberries, tomatoes, sweet peppers, chillis, mange tout, early potatoes, rhubarb, artichokes, onions, squash, mediocre sweetcorn, sprouts, raspberries, gooseberries, lettuce, cabbages and cauliflower.

Other negatives: blighted spuds so it was a small main crop, garlic were poor, shallots also poor; apples, plums, peaches, pears, cherries, aubergines all nonexistent.

Having said all this, I know that I had done better than others on our site.
Read about my allotment exploits at Ecodolly at plots 37 & 39.  Questions, queries and comments are appreciated at Comment on Ecodolly's exploits on plots 37 & 39

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Yana

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #9 on: September 23, 2012, 20:51 »
Potatoes a disaster, sweetcorn were ravaged by foxes or stolen, best pumpkin stolen. Tomatoes in greenhouse all rotted.
On the reverse, Beetroot was OK, Kale was great, French and runner beans are still going strong, peas good, over-run with peppers and cues, carrots good, pak choi still going strong, outdoor aubergines a success for the first time ever, outdoor beef steak tomatoes good. Chard, spinach, great results.
Courgettes ok but very few squashes. Apart from losing best pumpkin, others are now coming on well and have harvested quite a few small pumpkins.
I have my own cement mixer and not afraid to use it!!

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fatcat1955

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #10 on: September 23, 2012, 21:07 »
Good point's
Spud's
Garlic
Onion's
Cuke's (greenhouse)
Tom's   (greenhouse)
Runner's
French bean's

Bad Point's
Carrot's (giving up after 3 year's)
Cauli's   all bolted
strawberries
Broccoli  all bolted

14 first's and a banksian medal to boot. Overall a v good year.

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allot2learn

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #11 on: September 23, 2012, 21:21 »
Spuds have been a joy and a waste of growing space. Marfona which I had success with last year are full of wireworm and slugs, the sante just died off with all the rain. Kestrel have been brilliant. No holes from either slugs or wireworm. A good crop. Ambo maincrop have a few wireworm holes but the spuds are big enough to stand a little waste.

Peas have been a waste of growing space. I've since done a soil test and found it to be very acid so it's getting a dose of lime ready for next spring.

Two sowings of carrots have both failed. Onions sets survived but are smallish compared to last year, but they are now dried and safely in the shed. Rhubarb has been great. We've had plenty fresh and there is 24lbs in the freezer. Jerusalem Artichokes are a first timer for me and if the top growth is anything to go by I'll be breaking wind like a good 'un.  :tongue2:

Cauliflower, Callabrese, Sprouts, and psb in the ground and coming on well. Spring and winter cabbage awaiting planting out. Sweet peppers have been cra.......... erm, rubbish.

At least I have managed to coax two cucumber plants to last a full season which is a first for me.  :lol:

I just need to be better prepared for the glorious summer which we are going to have next year.  ::)

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rowan57

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #12 on: September 23, 2012, 21:34 »
Had the plot since May.

Excellent:
Brassica's (Cabbage's, Kale, Brussel Sprouts)
French Beans
Squash
Swiss Chard - Sold 10lbs at market last week, order for another 10lbs this weekend coming.
Beetroot
Lettuce
Rhubarb - No harvest this year, but divided 1 giant rhubarb into 4 and they have all come back strong.
Asparagus - Strong first year of growth.

Poor / Hoed In:
Rocket - Cannot get the blasted stuff to grow.
Runner Beans - Hoed under after 6 weeks of sitting sadly doing nowt.
Tomatoes - Wayyyy too late starting off, one or two fruits MAY make maturity but unlikely.
Parsnips - Old seed? Never even germinated.
Peas - about 20 pea plants across 4 5m beds, all hoed under. Got very very weedy while I was on holiday, never stood a chance.

I grow on free draining fen soil, and  it has been consistently dry for about the last 3 months. Today and Friday first days of proper rain for months. I have only had to weed every 2 weeks for the last 2 months (Luccckkkkkky!)

Rowan

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surbie100

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #13 on: September 23, 2012, 22:12 »
I think I've had a fairly good first year, all things considered. the lowlights have been:
Tomatoes were a disaster - the ones on the plot got blight, the ones on the balcony got botrytis
Spuds 50% rotted in the rain - but the Charlottes were brilliant
BNS - only 4 fruits, all very late after a summer of male flowers only
Peas - 1 pod, 2 peas....nuff said!

Everything else so far has been surprisingly good:
dwarf french beans, courgettes, cucumbers, kohlrabi, beets, carrots, chillies on the balcony, sorrel, chicory, strawbs, radishes and fennel. Though that last one bolted wholesale, but was still tasty.

Am looking forward to next year and seeing what happens to my psb, caulis, chard and swedes.

Hopefully I'll have 5 more beds and fruit bushes/trees to put in.

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Annen

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Re: gardening year 2012
« Reply #14 on: September 24, 2012, 13:46 »
Potatoes -
       2 out of a row of 5 Rooster
       none from Nadine, they just disappeared altogether,
       about 5 from each Charlotte plant.
Courgettes and pumpkin (Jack be little)shrivelled and died.
Winter onions had to be lifted early, as they had no tops to turn over, so were small,
Maincrop onions (Turbo) the same but later.
Peas produced pods, and the sweet peas flowered, but never looked happy from the day they went out and turned yellow and died.
Wildflower bee bed full of dock and buttercups and one poppy.
Strawberries, small berries and poor quality.
Apples, what apples?
Runner beans and autumn rasps are producing now when it is almost too late
Sweetcorn cobs were small but delicious and better than the patchy pollination of last year.
Cabbages brilliant!
Rhubarb good.
The list goes on, but I'm depressed enough already
A great year if you like cabbage!  My fifth year of allotment gardening and the worst one yet.
Anne


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