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• #2752
This was on Gardener's Question Time on Friday. Basically good luck, it's going to be tough in the UK.
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• #2753
Samesies
1 Attachment
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• #2754
Hmm frustrating as I really like mine and it's done very well this summer.
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• #2755
You need another 3 months of sun
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• #2756
two melons on my melon plants, one holed and hollowed by critters the other ( the size of a large grapefruit ) just picked and had half, a bit under ripe but nice sweet juicy and tasty, looks like a cross between a cantilupe and galia
any ideas on how to encourage numerous fruits on courgettes squashes and melons, my plants seem a bit sparse production wise
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• #2757
Did you mate the male and female flowers? Helps to do this yourself with the aid of a toothbrush.
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• #2758
haven't done that, actually the courgettes and melons appeared with bee type pollination
i'll have a look at rhs website and try and find out the difference between male and female and do some pollinating
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• #2759
I understood you need to pinch out the leader growing point to encourage side shoots.
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• #2760
another failing
is it worth doing that now ? they have about 40cm growth from the root -
• #2761
I reckon so. We could have another 6-7 weeks of growing weather. Try it. You might win a prize in your local horticultural show.
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• #2762
The female usually has the fruit on the back like a small nodule
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• #2763
Compost bins that aren't enormous. Talk to me.
Predominantly for kitchen waste as there won't be a lot from our small garden but we will be growing things so there'll be limited waste of a larger variety from time to time. Small and not completely hideous would be lovely. Tumbling / static / plastic / wooden - who knows? Maybe you do.
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• #2764
We have one of these:
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• #2765
We end up with a lot of grass cuttings so I used big black bins with holes as a second.
My mum has a wormery where the worms escaped which is pretty compact.
I'd be temped to make an insulated one. But the one above for <£100 does seem like a great option. Although it looks a bit ventilated to have near where you might sit or smell it.
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• #2766
My old man has a wormery for his kitchen.
It's relatively compact and produces intense fertilizer. -
• #2767
100l - 200l ones shaped like a dalek can sometime be picked up free from your local council, reduces their green waste handling
would that size be too big
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• #2768
Yeah, prob a bit too big I think. It's a pretty small space. About 4m x 4m with a 1.5 x 10m alley at the bottom of some steep steps. There are two large raised beds in the square area and there's some space in the alley but I don't want to clutter it too much with daleks (it's bike and barbecue storage at the moment until I can figure out if we've got a cellar or not).
Haven't really come across wormeries before but just looked them up now and they seem interesting. My son would love one in a year or so I think.
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• #2769
Wormeries; valuable source of supplemental protein post-brexit?
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• #2770
In.
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• #2771
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• #2772
Ray Mears fed me a maggot once. csb
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• #2773
is that code?
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• #2774
If only. Now THAT would be a story.
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• #2775
Problem with small composters is they don't get hot enough to break down the material in them. Hence why they tend to be pretty big.
A wormery is perfect for kitchen scraps or the insulated composters are good but spendy. Ask @dancing james about them.
My passionflower has fruited. What do I need to do to harvest and grow from seeds? If at all possible?