Greenhouse Border

Discussion in 'Greenhouse Growing' started by Freddy, Aug 6, 2009.

  1. Freddy

    Freddy Miserable git, well known for it

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    Hi chums. I want to delve a bit into the possibilities of NOT using growbags, but growing in the border instead next year. To me, the main issue is having to change the soil every year. How much to take out ? What to put in it's place ? Anything else I need to think about ?
    Cheers...freddy.
     
  2. JWK

    JWK Gardener Staff Member

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    I dig out my borders every year, I take out about a spades depth. I've never really thought wether that is enough or not. Its well past the root ball of the tomatoes so I think so. The greenhouse soil si spread onto a bed that isn't going to have spuds on it next year. I then add lots of compost into the greenhouse border, so I don't need much soil, which is taken from another bed that also didn't have spuds the previous year.

    It is quite hard work, I get out maybe 5 or 6 wheelbarrow loads of soil.

    Finally I give the new soil a good drenching of diluted Jeyes fluid, that needs to be done several weeks before planting anything.
     
  3. Kristen

    Kristen Under gardener

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    "I take out about a spades depth. I've never really thought wether that is enough or not"

    Me to, both counts!

    Mine is spread onto where the spuds were this year (or onto a flower bed)

    I don't have any soil in mine. Half compost, have well rotted manure. Mind you ... lots of soil gets attached to things that go into my compost heap, so its mostly soil anyway ...
     
  4. Freddy

    Freddy Miserable git, well known for it

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    Hi folks. Thanks for the replies. I've seen the word 'compost' used twice so far. Are we talking the bagged stuff, or homemade ?
     
  5. JWK

    JWK Gardener Staff Member

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    I use my best home made compost for the greenhouse, sometimes I buy a few cheap grow bags and empty them into the planting holes for the tomatoes.
     
  6. Freddy

    Freddy Miserable git, well known for it

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  7. seedstotal

    seedstotal Gardener

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    homemade turned out to be always better for me
     
  8. frogesque

    frogesque Gardener

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    My small greenhouse has a slab base.

    I grow toms etc. in 3gall 99p cheapo builder's buckets and use a JI type mixture for growing in. 7 parts loam, 2 parts home compost from dalek bin, 1 part peat and 1 part sharp sand. All except sand are passed through a 3/8 mesh sieve. Use a rasp to make holes in the buckets at the bottom edge for drainage.

    The buckets last for years, it helps keep the greenhouse clean, easy to take plants in and out and a whelbarrow of compost goes a long way! At the end of the season the exhusted compost goes to the flower borders.

    Only disadvantage is you don't have the same height above the bucket as you do growing directly in the ground.
     
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