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I have recently been given a piece of land to grow on, I was wondering; what can I grow right now?

By AnnabellaWB on 26 October 09 in Growing | Report misuse

5 Responses

  • It's a good time to plant fruit trees or bushes and you could sow some forage pea or rye green manure now to protect the soil over winter and enrich it for next year's planting.
    Have fun whatever you decide to do!

    By clare_ewins on 20 November 09 | Report misuse

  • Sara has given you fab advice, you still have time to get all of those things in for the spring. You can also start to plan what you want to grow next year. One of my favourite things to do is to sit with the seed catalogues some paper and plan out your plot and the rotation you will use, then you can work out a calendar of what, where, when and you will be sorted ready to start growing in the Spring. You can also do lots of ground work too, top dressing of an organic manure like chicken pellets, cover up beds/areas you won't be planting on to suppress weeds and also it will help to warm up the soil in spring. Good luck and enjoy.

    By miffy on 03 November 09 | Report misuse

  • Hi
    As well as all the onions, garlic. broad beans, early peas etc, its spring bulb planting time and some daffs and a few tulops and alliums don't take up much growing space but make it possible to harvest early flowers and cheer the plot up in the depths of cold old March/April Good luck

    By sara venn on 31 October 09 | Report misuse

  • According to gardener's question time Broad Beans are to be sown now (that's if you like them!) which I don't.
    Good luck.
    Sarah T

    By taylorsarahjane on 30 October 09 | Report misuse

  • Hi! It'll be a bit difficult to see any immediate results from anything you plant now, but here are a few things you can get in to steal a march on next spring. Catch up with "What to do in Oct/Nov" on the blog. I haven't tried mizuna myself, but my landcress is still producing under a cloche. Great in soup as well as fresh in salads and sandwiches.
    You can get garlic and onion sets in now, and broad beans as well. Try and cover them with a cloche of some sort to keep them warm until they come up. The best thing you can do is some digging and/or covering the ground with a nice thick layer of manure to both fertilise ready for next spring and keep the weeds off during the winter.
    Get hold of some weed suppressant fabric if you can and put it down, taking it off to dig over and pull out weed roots in stretches of about 10 yards. Once the ground looks nice and weed free, cover it in manure and then recover with the fabric. Should be fantastic by the spring and keep you busy! Don't try and do too much at one time.
    Best of luck!

    By Lucy Harding on 27 October 09 | Report misuse

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