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Gardening

Find tips and tricks to make your garden or allotment flourish on our Gardening forum.

Am I too late to grow anything?

8 replies

IceLemonGin · 30/05/2016 14:51

Moved into our house last year, the garden a complete jungle, we have spent the last couple of weeks toiling away out there and have a nice area that would look great with some pots/planters.

Am I too late to grow anything now? Ideally something easy as I have a toddler so don't have masses of time to devote to pruning etc.

OP posts:
IceLemonGin · 30/05/2016 14:51

Forgot to say...thanks in advance! Flowers

OP posts:
silversixpence · 30/05/2016 18:18

Not at all, although I would probably use plug plants or go down to the garden centre and pick a few things. What sort of plants did you have in mind?

Ferguson · 30/05/2016 19:44

Cosmos are quick growing for plenty of colour in a few weeks:

www.dailymail.co.uk/home/gardening/article-2203090/Monty-Dons-gardening-tips-Cosmos-just-world.html

And the quickest and easiest veg are courgettes; come in green or yellow varieties - though both taste the same. They grow VERY LARGE so need plenty of space:

grow seed on a windowsill NOW, and place each see on its side:

www.rhs.org.uk/advice/grow-your-own/vegetables/courgettes?type=v

traviata · 30/05/2016 22:52

do you mean that you'd like a few pretty pots to decorate your cleared space?

if so - you could sow seeds of annual plants such as cosmos, corn flower, nigella, escholzia, sunflowers, nasturtiums. They will come up as seedlings and will be proper flowering plants by July. The toddler might enjoy sowing seeds and watching the results;
OR
you could lay out a few ££ at the garden centre, buy some bedding plants and put them into pots and/or the ground, and you will have instant or very quick pretty plants for the next few months.

what about the future? Do you plan to do gardening or do you not really have time? Either is fine, they just need different strategies.

IceLemonGin · 01/06/2016 09:34

Sorry I didn't come back sooner! The pretty pots sound ideal, I'd rather grow something that spend a small fortune at the garden centre as I reckon the sense of achievement would be good and a bit of an education for the toddler!

In future, I will have more time to spend in the garden. Next year I'd like to plant a border down the side of my garden. I don't think I'd have chance to grow veggies as it's not a huge garden and I know they take a bit more tlc.

Thanks for your replies, I am off to buy some seeds Grin

OP posts:
fiorentina · 03/06/2016 21:30

You could also buy a few hardy herbs and put them in pots, that's quite rewarding! Thyme, mint, Rosemary, bay etc. They grow fast and are useful too..?!

Belleende · 03/06/2016 21:50

My local market is much cheaper than the garden centre for plants. For £20 You could come out with enough for 5 or 6 decent size pots. You could also plant some flowering shrubs for instant colour that comes back every year

JuxtapositionRecords · 03/06/2016 21:54

The great thing about this time of year is the garden centres are flogging the spring flowering perennials

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