We filled up a number of empty spaces in The Secret Garden Club's beds with some late summer seeds. Some quick-growing varieties can be started off now to give you a
crop before the winter sets in, weather permitting. Some crops need to be started off in the autumn to give them their best chance of developing well in the new year, so it's as well to remember to get them going. We also looked at how to
raise a crop of new potatoes to be eaten on Christmas Day.
So, we'll start with some fast-growing veg which you can sow now in order to harvest and eat later on in the autumn. Typically these will be final sowings of summer crops.
Oriental leaves
Back in July salads were the main topic for
the Secret Garden Club. We looked at how salad vegetables can be grown
throughout the year if you take the trouble to protect them in the winter
months.
Your best bet for salads at this time is for
cut-and-come-again leaves. Here you don't let the seedlings develop into
full-grown lettuces, but pick them a leaf at a time when you want a salad
garnish. The seeds germinate quickly and you can grow a number of different
varieties. Not just lettuce, but oriental veg such as pak choi, tatsoi, mustard
leaves and mizuna.
At this time of year and into October, you
can sow your seeds directly into the open ground. They'll germinate in about a
week (mizuna almost certainly sooner) and you can start picking leaves in about
a month. Keep them well watered - not a problem this summer - as a dry spell will
check their growth and they will run to seed. Come October, the nights may well
be getting cooler and you might want to throw some horticultural
fleece over them to insulate them from the cold.
Alternatively you can grow salads in containers, so that you can bring them indoors or under cover at the first sign of cold
weather. We've got three different types of container all happily growing
salad.
The fruit crate is one of our favourite containers for
growing salads and other fast-growing vegetables. This mixed salad crate was
sown in August out here on the terrace. The trough of lamb's lettuce was sown
in July and has been kept indoors - lamb's lettuce can be erratic when it comes
to germination and so I'll always sown them under cover if I can. The small
pots, also sown in July, have been raised in a patio greenhouse - these have a
mixture of oriental leaves and give me a regular supply of interesting, spicy
leaves for garnish.
These also have the advantage of germinating
quicker, which is something you might well want to take into account at this
time of year. Once the seedlings are growing well, you can move them outside to
save on your indoor space.
Outdoors, of course, you can grow in greater
quantities, and aside from possibly protecting against the cold, they need less
cossetting than indoor plants.
As autumn wears on, you can continue to sow
salad. By mid-October, I'd start them all off indoors using containers, and
find the sunniest, lightest spot in the house to germinate the seedlings.
Germination and subsequent growth will be much slower as the days get shorter.
Pak choi
You can continue to sow pak choi in
September. If it looks like staying warm and damp, try sowing seed outdoors,
but for more reliable germination, I would either sow in modules indoors and
then transfer the seedlings outdoors in October time, or go back to our trusty
fruit crate.
This is a good depth for growing
fast-maturing veg like pak choi and evenly spaced, will give you around 12 plants.
You can either treat them as cut-and-come-again leaves or let each plant
develop a heart to harvest as mature pak choi.
One thing that puts people off growing pak choi is that it’s
a bit of a pest-magnet. It attracts
slugs, flea beetles and pigeons for starters, all wanting some of those
succulent leaves.
Pigeons can be deterred by growing them under a net; pigeons
and flea beetle will be kept off if you grow under cover. To keep the slugs
out, you can use tried and tested methods such as beer traps, night raids, even
slug pellets, although there are many good reasons not to use pellets, mainly
to do with contamination and the risk of something else, like a bird, or even a
cat or dog, eating the pellet by mistake and being harmed by it.
The slug and snail deterrent I use for all my crops which
are vulnerable – brassicas, courgette and pumpkin seedlings, sunflowers
and globe artichokes – is to grow the seedling inside a copper ring, or collar.
Slugs and snails don’t like travelling over copper – it sets off a reaction in
their mucus, like giving them a little electric shock.
Now you can buy ready-made rings out of copper, but they are
quite expensive. Copper tape isn’t exactly cheap either – 4 metres will
typically cost about £7 – but it will stretch a lot further and you can make
your own collars using cut-up water bottles.
They are re-usable – I have some home-made collars that are
about five years old now and even when the copper dulls to a brown colour it’s
still effective. Note though that you aren’t killing the slugs and snails, just
keeping them off particular plants.
This may be a good thing, if you don’t like the idea of
killing them, or a bad thing, if you want to exercise some population control.
If the latter, then my recommendation is to invest in some nematodes come
spring.
Pop the collars carefully over the seedlings when they
emerge, or when you plant them out. Be careful, especially in the open ground,
not to place the ring over a slug or snail that’s already in residence. Then
you will trap the slug inside the ring, not outside.
Peas
You can sow peas in autumn in order to get an extra
early crop the next spring. The idea here is to sow now, so that you can be
picking your first peas of the year next May. Then you start sowing again in
March to harvest from June, giving you a constant supply of peas from May through to August.
Your chances will be improved if you use
different varieties at different times. Meteor or Kelvedon Wonder are known is
known as ‘first early’ pea which will be the first to mature, so a good choice for
autumn sowing. I’d
recommend a sugar snap pea for ripening in early summer – June
and July – as they taste so deliciously sweet, especially so when they ripen
in sun and warmth.
Peas can be sown directly into the ground,
usually in the shape of the five-spot on a dice. However many people find that
germination can be poor. Hungry mice usually get the blame for this – they
like nothing better than nibbling at peas. You should always keep peas for
sowing safely away from mice – I had a sealed packet of peas last winter which I kept in my
storage chest. Retrieved them in the spring to find a neat hole nibbled out of
one corner and all the peas gone.
I sow the peas in a double row, about four
inches apart. Keep them nice and warm and moist – and away from mice. Up high in a greenhouse
or a garage is good, somewhere light and frost-free.
Let the pea seedling grow to about 3-inches
high before planting out, so that they’ve developed a good root system.
Then dig out a shallow trench in your
vegetable bed, give the peas a really good soaking and using a trowel you
should be able to slide them out, all in one piece, into the trench in the open
ground. Now firm the soil around the seedlings, and water again. They will need
some sticks or mesh to climb up – you can put this in before or after
transplanting.
There are a number of reasons for using the
guttering:
- It’s shallow, so it doesn’t use so much compost = economical;
- Because it’s shallow, it’s easier to slide out the seedlings in one piece. The long smooth semi-circular shape fits neatly into a shallow trench as well. You don’t need to dig out and then in again;
- This is important because pea seedlings don’t really like to be disturbed and are easily flattened;
- The seedlings get a good head start before the pea weevils start eating U-shaped notches in the leaves.
In fact I’m so enamoured of these half-guttering seedbeds that I use them for beetroot - getting the seedlings going and thinned before sliding out, and also parsnips. Parsnips are notoriously inconsistent germinators and this really helps get a good parsnip crop going. The other advantage of using the guttering, which in practice works particularly well with parsnips is that the seedlings grow to a good height, entirely weed-free.
Sown in the open ground, it’s
sometimes difficult to tell, especially with parsnips, which is a weed and
which is a tiny parsnip seedling. So you leave well alone, and end up with a
weedy bed – not a good start for your crops.
Back to the peas ...
The peas are hardy and shouldn’t need protection from frost, but if we have a very cold winter, it will do no harm and will help them if you throw horticultural fleece over the seedlings to insulate them. Don’t expect too much in the way of growth over the winter: it’s when the weather warms up in March (maybe even February) that they will start to put on growth and be ready early.
You may well have problems with mice trying to dig the plant
up to get at the seed under the soil. Try putting mesh down over the seedlings
– they will happily grow through that and it should prevent the mice from being
able to dig up the plant.
New potatoes for Christmas
This is a traditional way to grow new potatoes: planting them in late summer, ready to harvest on Christmas morning so that you have freshly dug new potatoes with your Christmas dinner. It sounds almost romantic, doesn’t it?
The reality is slightly different, but it’s
still a fun thing to do. Don’t expect massive yields from your autumn grown spuds –
unless you plant dozens of them, you can’t expect much more than enough potatoes for
Christmas lunch. Don’t expect them to grow terribly big – again not a bad thing with nutty little new
potatoes.
One reason to do it this year that I find
quite compelling is that this has been a horrible year for potatoes – too
cold, too wet, at just the time they were maturing.
There are two ways you can approach this. You
can either plant them in the open ground, or use the bin liner technique which
we’re big fans of here at the Secret Garden Club.
A nice strong black binbag will do. Or a compost bag, so long as it has that black lining inside. The black lining is to keep the light out, so that the potatoes inside don’t go green.
We planted Duke Of York potatoes at Sunday's Secret Garden Club. These are early potatoes good for both boiling and roasting, depending on how you like your Christmas Day spuds.
The Duke Of York potatoes had little shoots emerging from them before we planted them. This means the potatoes have been chitted,ie, stored in a light cool place so that the shoots develop. It’s not essential to chit potatoes but it does get them off to a head start in the ground. It also helps you when you’re planting them out as you can see where the shoots will develop and plant them the right way up.
Each compost bag will take three seed potatoes, seed potatoes being the starter which will grow into new potato plants.
1) The first thing to do is to put about three inches of compost in the bottom of the bag, spread evenly. Make it easier for yourself by rolling the sides of the bag down so that your bag is about six inches tall. You’ll want the sides rolled down anyway after you plant the potatoes – if you keep the bags at full height your potatoes will never see the sun and they won’t grow.
2) Next you want to take a sharpened pencil or sharp stick and make some drainage holes in the bottom of your potato bag. This is very important – you do not want waterlogged potatoes. They will rot, and they will stink while they’re doing it.
So, make about 5-6 drainage holes at the foot of each bag.
3) Now place three potatoes into the bag. Space them out evenly.
Always use seed potatoes, ie, bought from a nursery or garden centre specifically for growing. Seed potatoes should be guaranteed free from viruses, which culinary potatoes won’t be. Potatoes in the shops may have been sprayed with a shoot suppressant.
Potatoes in the shops may not have been grown in the UK and so may not be well adapted to grow here. Many, if not most, of the seed potatoes grown in the UK come from Scotland and are bred to grow well in our conditions.
4) The potatoes should go into the sack with the chits uppermost.
5) Once the potatoes are in, cover them with more compost: aim to have a layer of compost about 2-3 inches thick over the chits.
6) Finally, water them lightly. They don’t need to be soaked. Check that water is seeping out of the drainage holes.
7) Put the potato bag outside somewhere light and somewhere reasonably sheltered.
8) After about 2-3 weeks you’ll see the dark green leaves poking up through the soil surface. Once the leaves are about 3-4 inches above the surface of the compost, add more compost to the bag, until the green tops are only just visible above the soil surface.
You’ll probably need to starting unroll the sides to accommodate the new compost as well. This is an ongoing process. Every time the plant grows so that you have about 3-4 inches of stem and leaves above the surface, unroll the sides a little more and add more compost.
If it rains a couple of times a week, you probably won’t need to water them. But do check your compost: if it’s very dry, then water it. Make sure any excess water is running out through those drainage holes. If it rains a lot and you put your hand in and the compost is sodden, move the bag under cover for a few days to let it dry out a bit.
In early December, you can put on a pair of gloves and stick your hand into the compost to make sure you have some potatoes coming, hopefully enough for dinner on Christmas Day.
The best way to harvest the bagged potatoes is simply to up-end the bag on to a surface and pick out the spuds. Put the rest of the plant on the compost heap and spread the compost on your garden beds.
The main advantage of growing potatoes in a container at this time of year is that potatoes are not frost-hardy, so if the weather turns very cold between now and Christmas when the plants are still young and tender, you can move them indoors/under cover. Keep them in the light, somewhere frost-free, and don't forget to water them if they are under cover. Do not overwater – if
they sit in the wet, they will rot.
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