Friday open thread: back to the garden
Mar. 29th, 2024 09:08 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
It's the morning of the first day of a four-day weekend, I'm spending the holiday at home, and from tomorrow, the weather is supposed to be very nice. We've just had landscaping work done on our back garden, leaving us with six large vegetable patches, a slightly tidier herb garden (partly filled already with sage, rosemary and a massive bay tree), and a huge raised flower bed. The front garden, on which we had landscaping work done last year, now consists mainly of a large, L-shaped raised flower bed, partially filled with flowering bulbs, but still with lots more space to plant.
In other words, the perfect conditions to do some gardening this long weekend.
My question for you all, therefore, is what should I plant in my garden?
I already have seeds for peas, corn, parsnip, beetroot, zucchini, butternut pumpkin, radishes, tomatoes, rocket, lettuce, and spring onions, all of which I've grown in this garden before with varying levels of success. I'm also very keen to add to the herb garden, and need to fill the flowerbeds with something — so I'm open to suggestions!
If you don't want to suggest anything, feel free to use this prompt to talk about your own current gardening adventures.
In other words, the perfect conditions to do some gardening this long weekend.
My question for you all, therefore, is what should I plant in my garden?
I already have seeds for peas, corn, parsnip, beetroot, zucchini, butternut pumpkin, radishes, tomatoes, rocket, lettuce, and spring onions, all of which I've grown in this garden before with varying levels of success. I'm also very keen to add to the herb garden, and need to fill the flowerbeds with something — so I'm open to suggestions!
If you don't want to suggest anything, feel free to use this prompt to talk about your own current gardening adventures.
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Date: 2024-03-29 09:24 am (UTC)I keep walking down Chapel Street hoping that the house that usually has the huge plant stall will have set it up again, but no luck so far. I hope they're all right.
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Date: 2024-03-29 09:51 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-03-29 02:31 pm (UTC)I keep walking down Chapel Street hoping that the house that usually has the huge plant stall will have set it up again, but no luck so far. I hope they're all right.
I wasn't aware of this at all — and now I hope they're all right, too.
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Date: 2024-03-29 09:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-03-29 02:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-03-29 10:00 am (UTC)Maybe marigolds? Again this is my own bias talking, since for appearance they're one of my favourite flowers, but they have an excellent reputation as a companion plant and have edible petals.
To go along with other bulbs, I'm personally very fond of dahlias.
If and only if you have time, I'd be interested to hear about your experiences in arranging for landscaping work.
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Date: 2024-03-29 02:47 pm (UTC)I had some unkillable parsley and basil plants that would die every winter and pop back up again each spring, but unfortunately the landscapers seem to have dug them out without being told to do so! But the point I'm making is that they die and come back, so you may have more success with them than you think.
Marigolds is a good idea, and dahlias — I love dahlias!
If and only if you have time, I'd be interested to hear about your experiences in arranging for landscaping work.
So I should point out upfront that this kind of work is not cheap — a four-figure sum, rather than a three-figure sum, depending on the scale of the work. We hired the landscapers last year to do the front garden, with the idea that if we liked them and were happy with the work, we would hire them again this year to do the back garden (since it would be a more complicated and expensive job).
My husband is on a couple of local area Facebook groups, and he searched back through them until he found a post where someone had asked for recommendations for landscapers, and we then dug through the comments and found details of four or five different landscaping businesses. I called them all and organised to meet them, described the work, got a quote, and so on. All of them were quoting about the same amount of money, so I made the decision based on how I felt about the people — the company we went with replied swiftly to emails (all the others needed to be chased up on the phone all the time) and were friendly, professional and easy to get along with — basically I felt good vibes about them. They did a good job, in the timeframe specified, and had listened to what we wanted and offerred suggestions when they felt what we wanted wasn't going to work. I was really happy with them, so we hired them again to do the back garden landscaping, and again everything worked out well.
My advice here:
(This would be my advice when hiring contractors to do any kind of work on your house or garden, not just landscaping.)
If you have any more questions, feel free to ask.
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Date: 2024-03-29 11:01 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-03-29 02:49 pm (UTC)We'll definitely get some flowering plants, although the last time I had nasturtiums, aphids descended and ate every single exposed part of the plant within a few days. Hopefully that won't happen again!
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Date: 2024-03-29 02:22 pm (UTC)(I have the blackest of thumbs, so gardening will always just be a pipe dream for me. Unless I become wealthy and can hire a gardener, but that seems unlikely.)
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Date: 2024-03-29 02:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-03-29 03:18 pm (UTC)The Cambridge botanical garden seems to have a list of good flowering plants for pollinators, which I scrolled dreamily through thinking about places where it actually rains :D
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Date: 2024-03-29 03:26 pm (UTC)It doesn't rain all that much in summer here — we're actually in the driest part of the country, although it certainly rains more than where you are.
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Date: 2024-03-29 05:51 pm (UTC)Ha ha, I have way too many gardening thoughts, but I won't move in to my new place until September...
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Date: 2024-03-30 02:46 pm (UTC)September is less than ideal if you're wanting to get started in the garden, although I guess it does give you the whole autumn and winter to observe the garden and ponder and plan.
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Date: 2024-03-30 03:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-03-30 03:15 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-03-29 06:07 pm (UTC)Broccoli does grow nicely and it's worth it. I love cucumbers because they taste much better home grown. Tomatoes?
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Date: 2024-03-30 02:51 pm (UTC)Tomatoes are my very favourite of all fruits and vegetables, so I'll definitely be growing some of those, and growing cucumbers seems like a sensible thing to pair with the tomatoes.
I think I'll steer clear of raspberries as we have enough trouble already with blackberries (our previous neighbours had let their entire garden become completely overrun with blackberries and other weeds, to the point that they filled the entire (massive) space and grew under our fence) as it is.
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Date: 2024-03-29 06:49 pm (UTC)If you want to grow mint or lemon balm, grow them in a pot - they will thrive but they won't take over your garden like Triffids. ;D
Oregano will thrive and look nice as will time and basil - purple basil is pretty enough to even put in your flower beds.
I grew up helping my championships winning gardener dad grow all our veg and every year I've overcome with the urge to plant a garden here except I boil in my own skin here for at least 9 months of the year and cannot stand it.
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Date: 2024-03-30 02:53 pm (UTC)Noted about the mint — I had an unkillable mint plant in our previous place that spread to fill the whole garden bed!
Thanks for the other herb suggestions, they're excellent — and glad to be able to benefit from your gardening knowledge, even if you're not able to grow your own (those temperatures sound unbearable!).
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Date: 2024-03-30 06:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-03-30 06:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-03-29 10:40 pm (UTC)Good luck!
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Date: 2024-03-30 02:55 pm (UTC)Good luck!
Thank you!
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Date: 2024-03-29 11:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-03-29 11:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-03-30 03:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2024-03-30 03:03 pm (UTC)The herb suggestions in particular are excellent — I want to branch out a bit beyond the standard rosemary, thyme, sage and bay, so it's good to have some idea of what works well.
We've just come back from the market and picked up so many seeds and seedlings, and I'm looking forward to a few hours in the garden getting them all planted.
Don't be like me and plant entire seed packets in your excitement - I ended up with >10 sage plants and more rocket than I could use before it bolted!
Oh no!
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Date: 2024-03-30 02:12 pm (UTC)last time i was able to properly have a herb plot (back in Copenhagen) I seeded most of them in stages so that they would be coming up fresh at different times and going to flower at different times. It was a fun experiment and I had a lot of butterflies and bees hanging out.
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Date: 2024-03-30 03:12 pm (UTC)last time i was able to properly have a herb plot (back in Copenhagen) I seeded most of them in stages so that they would be coming up fresh at different times and going to flower at different times. It was a fun experiment and I had a lot of butterflies and bees hanging out.
This sounds so lovely!