Am I going to miss this gardening year?

Discussion in 'General Gardening Discussion' started by Clueless 1 v2, Feb 8, 2023.

  1. Selleri

    Selleri Koala

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    Health and recovery come first. :old:

    @Clueless 1 v2 , would you be interested in exploring something new this season? Container gardening (interesting herbs, quick crops of unusual varieties and first season fruiting strawberries come to mind) or wildlife photography or house plants or tool maintenance perhaps extended to volunteer to do that for neighbours/ nearby charities...?

    Or how about free garden consultations for nearby beginners or charities? With your knowledge and experience that could make a big difference and give a workout to your garden brain even if you can't do the digging.

    The season will definitely not be wasted, just different. You (and the garden) will be just fine:)
     
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    • Clueless 1 v2

      Clueless 1 v2 Total Gardener

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      Good idea. I like a lot of herbs. I grew coriander in the window last year. I find herbs quite difficult to look after in open ground. Except my rosemary bush which is massive. I might get some thyme on the go in pots. Outdoors I find it quickly gets swamped by grass and weeds.

      As an aside, through a friend of a friend, I used to be acquainted with a local lad who is a chef. When he once asked if he could scrounge some rosemary, because the bush is so huge and grows rapidly (it keeps growing across the front door), I told him he can just come and get some whenever he wants, as long as he doesn't harm the bush. Then our mutual friend got dumped by his missus and moved away, so now the chef lad doesn't seem to come by, probably feels awkward about it now our mutual friend isn't about having been dumped by his missus.
       
    • infradig

      infradig Total Gardener

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      Why not utilise hanging baskets for your herbs, place at height to suit. Away from rain/ soil splashing, slugs and simple to prepare growing medium to suit .
       
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      • shiney

        shiney President, Grumpy Old Men's Club Staff Member

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        We have herbs growing rampant in our herb garden so we used them for cuttings and grew hanging baskets and patio pots that were very popular when we opened our garden for charity. We still have people wanting them although we don't open the garden any more :blue thumb:

        Just a note about coriander:- the people that farm it in this country have the choice of two types of seed for growing. One produces better leaves and the other is used for producing the seeds for spice. It's rare for the seed companies that sell to the public get them mixed up but has happened. :noidea:
         
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        • Selleri

          Selleri Koala

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          Chilterns have a good range of interesting herb and veg seeds Vegetables and Herbs - Chiltern Seeds secure online shop

          I usually go halves, some supermarket bog standard herb pots to harvest all summer and some seed grown interesting things. I have a 50cm permanent patio pot for the things we use all the time (Chives, Thyme, Parsley, Marjoram), and summer planters for Basil and experimentals (lemon grass is a fine new find, Agretti a bit of a disappointment, but fun).

          Supermarket pot herbs do very well when ripped in half and planted into a large container.

          I leave most of my herbs to flower, a sprig of flowering Thyme looks brilliant as a garnish or on a drink and bees love herb flowers. A lovely excuse to drink Gin or white wine. :biggrin:
           
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