- Joined
- Mar 27, 2012
- Messages
- 3,098
- Reaction score
- 1,550
- Location
- Suffolk
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 5
Very tidy.SWMBO's tomatoes planted in Quadgrow self watering system. Peppers down the middle and melons & cucumbers at the end.
You will, plants are kind, like bees they want that survive so they will do whatever they can toI’m so far behind schedule, not sure I’ll ever catch up.
In an unheated greenhouse but in a mini greenhouse (clear polythene cover) inside the greenhouse. Other than that, cut the brown bits of the stems back and left the green bits. Occasional small amount of water occasionally but other than that left them to it. I started out with 10 that had not died back as the autumn cold set it so - 20% - can't complain. I think I should have moved them to the mini greenhouse sooner than I did, I think I left them a bit too long without protection from the cold. I'd try again ..That's excellent news. I hope they do well. How did you keep them over Winter?
James
Mind you - even they don't want to put their customers off !Local food bank will be grateful for the contribution
Padron peppers are eaten small (1" length), the usual thing is to fry them.Very tidy.
What tomatoes are you growing?
I’m trying Padron peppers this year.
I have six plugs...the description says some are hot and some not.....so I suppose the supplier has not. I'll stuff them with cream cheese and play Padron RouletteIf you have ordered spicy and non-stinging seeds, I hope you have kept the spicy plants away from the rest.
Anything to oblige:Very tidy.
What tomatoes are you growing?
I’m trying Padron peppers this year.
Good editFirst pick of broad beans for tea. Small and succulent
If they're small, you can eat the pods as well.First pick of broad beans for tea. Small and succulent
Broad bean pods? don't really fancy that. Doesn't the hairy bit get stuck in your throatIf they're small, you can eat the pods as well.
Thought I was quick enough for no one to see that spell check called them broadbandsGood edit
Love broad beans.
Anyone have any experience of polycarbonate polytunnels?
Not if they're small. Just slice them into chunks and steam them. You could always just try one when you're cooking the rest of your beans.Broad bean pods? don't really fancy that. Doesn't the hairy bit get stuck in your throat
Saw this one on Ebay and was just wondering how robust they are and whether you'd want 4mm or 6mm. Thought someone might have one. Not sure about galvanised steel. Think aluminium might be better.I discovered a thing a couple of weeks back called a "polycrub", which is pretty much this. Developed on Shetland I think, to withstand their weather. It has low wooden sides and then the main part of the arch has twinwall polycarbonate laid over the top and fixed to it using wooden battens. Doors and ventilation in the end walls. I think you can even fit guttering for rainwater collection. I think it provides the growing space of a polytunnel, possibly insulated even better than a greenhouse, much cheaper than a greenhouse.
I bought a cheap 6m x 3m polytunnel from that river place last year with a view to using it for over-winter "bird flu" housing for the chickens because I didn't want to put them in our big polytunnel (we use that for crops over the winter). It's, well, crap, if I'm honest. Not even up to the winds we get here and it's not possible to dig the cover into the earth because the "skirt" is too small. I'm considering the possibility of converting it into a polycrub-type setup however. I reckon I could get some recycled scaffold boards to make walls and then fix the polytunnel itself to the top edges of those so I get a bit more height. Fit twinwall polycarb to the arch, but horizontally rather than looping it over the top because the curve of the arch is much tighter. Then I just have to make new doors and throw the old cover away (or repurpose bits of it as something else in my case, more likely).
I reckon it would then probably work nicely as winter quarters for the chickens too, and they'd be fertilising it for a summer crop. Although it might also be tempting to use it as permanent housing for them, with access to a larger pen in the summer.
James
Saw this one on Ebay and was just wondering how robust they are and whether you'd want 4mm or 6mm. Thought someone might have one. Not sure about galvanised steel. Think aluminium might be better.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/224060612797
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