Gardening Tips & Guides

Buckinghamshire Gardening Section


Buckinghamshire Gardening Navigation


|

Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Gardening Book |
Herb Borade |
Gardening Garden |
Gardening Center |
Gardening Add Link |
Gardening Tool |
Gardening Gift |
Gardening News |
Gardening Cart |
Nude Gardening |
Organic Gardening |
Get Gardening Advice |
40% Stabilize Hydrogen Peroxide For Hydroponics |
Organic Vegetable Gardening |
Gardening Software |

List of Gardening Articles
List of Gardening Links




Main Buckinghamshire Gardening sponsors

Buckinghamshire Gardening

 

Welcome to Gardening Tips & Guides

 

Buckinghamshire Gardening Article

Thumbnail example

This is a selection made from among articles on Buckinghamshire Gardening. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.

Gardening Does Not Need To Stop After Your Autumn Harvest. Even In Winter, You Can

from: Gordon Hall

Gardening does not need to stop after your autumn harvest. Even in winter, you can plant herbs and where weather permits winter crops, such as lettuce, cabbage, cauliflower, silver beet and spinach, brussels sprouts, broccoli, broad beans and finally onions and beetroot.


Winter can also be a good time to be planting herbs such as sage and thyme, dill, mint, parsley and chives.

Some gardeners plant lettuce direct into the ground in rows. however you can sprinkle some lettuce seeds in a small area close together and prick out the largest of the lettuce seedlings to sow, this way you can spread your crop over a longer period.

If your ground is not going to be covered three foot deep in snow you could try sowing Arugula, sow direct in rows 10 centimetres apart (3.9in). Arugula is sometimes called Rocket, Roquette or Italian Cress. It has a peppery nut flavour.

You can start harvesting when the leaves are 7 or 8cm long (2.76in to 3.15in), taking just a few leaves at a time. Grow virtually the same as cabbage. Arugula is a cool weather crop, it runs to seed early in hot weather. Harvest in 30 to 60 days.

Broad Beans can be grown in rows, 50CM apart (19.69in), directly, sow seed 20cm apart (7.87in), sow 5 centimeter deep (1.97in),These beans are good for cool climates. Sow while the temperature remains between 5 degrees Celsius to 18 degrees Celsius (41f to 64.4f). You find the short pod type tends to mature later and gives a fatter bean.

harvest in 120 days Plant all of your fruit trees during the winter too. Spray existing fruit trees with a copper-based fungacide as the buds begin to swell.

Winter is also a good time to prune existing fruit and ornamental trees while they are bare. You can also prune grape and berry bushes and vines during Winter.

If you want to plant bare rooted roses, do that in Winter too.

But most of all...have fun and remember a garden can be very forgiving.

About The Author
Gordi Hall is a dedicated home gardener and enjoys teaching others how to succeed with their gardens. For more great gardening tips for every time of year, visit Gordi's website.

http://www.best-home-gardening-tips.com

 


Other Buckinghamshire Gardening related Articles

Grow Great Tomatoes Using Container Gardening Methods
Transplanting Tips
HOW TO READ A SEED CATALOG
Tips For Spring Gardening
How Does Your Garden Grow

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


 

Buckinghamshire Gardening News

Ban the meerkats - Telegraph.co.uk


Telegraph.co.uk

Ban the meerkats
Telegraph.co.uk
These words were music to my ears - these shows should get people gardening, not leave them bemused or dumbfounded. But Tatton, alas, had the greatest ...

Read more...