Category Archives: Greenhouse

Seedlings: potting on

The seeds grew into little plants! The greenhouse is full and most of them aren’t quite ready to plant-out but they are getting there. I feel a sense of quiet satisfaction!

I have learnt some things. It is a lot of work. And you need an exit strategy – you can’t stop once they’ve germinated. They need potting on and potting on; and the right amount of water; and hardening off. It’s a conveyor belt and getting them through the first stage is just the start.

And potting-on is a LOT more complicated than Monty Don lets on and they don’t just come out with a little push and lovely rootball. Things to remember:

  • Sow thinly. I understand why now. Otherwise you can’t separate them.
  • Do it as soon they’ve got proper leaves. Don’t let them get too big because then the roots are too strong and don’t come out
  • Make sure the pot they’re coming from isn’t completely dried out but don’t get it really wet first, otherwise it clags together
  • Empty the pot with the seedlings out gently on to some other soil and then tease them out – don’t try and take them out of the pot

It doesn’t help that I don’t really know what everything is! The Queen Anne’s lace is doing well, as is the Greek oregano (a third in heavy soil, a third in sandy soil, a third not done yet). The scabious (or is it nicotiana?) I did first and doing okay. I’ve only just done the nicotiana (or scabious?), which I did all the wrong things to (see above) is alive now, but will it be tomorrow?

Here is a picture of my greenhouse which looks like a full cupboard.

I love Sweet Peas

“If you can’t be with the one you love, love the one you’re with”.

Generally, I am good at this. I love the things that I am good at growing. I love the way they surprise me and flourish. Sweet peas are an exception. I am not very good at growing them but I still love them. I am not romantic about flowers but I am about sweet peas.


I know what the problem is – I grow them in pots and they get mildew. I need to grow mildew resistant ones, but I fall in love with ones that aren’t. I should grow them straight in the soil, but I have so many slugs and snails, they never make it. And every year, I know I can’t do it properly but I do it anyway!

Last year, along with the cerinthe, I bought some from Sarah Raven (Lord Nelson, Matacuna and one other) and grew them in pots on my balcony they were so beautiful. They all died in the heatwave in London, even though someone was watering them. But I harvested seed and I have some in my greenhouse. Let’s see…

Chilli

I’m going to try and grow some of this too.

Things I know so far: 5+ hours of direct sunlight a day.

January

I got some from Vital Seeds – who I read about in The Garden and who sell organic seed. They came in a lovely package and made me feel green fingered just opening it.

I have planted them in the growlight. I am sceptical they will come up this early but we will see…..

li
My Xmas present

5th Feb

They have come up! They look all perky. We’ll see.

26th March

I could not love my chillis more. It’s going to get warmer next week so I will put them out then.

August 1st

I don’t think it’s going to end well. I put them in the greenhouse and then hardened them off. When we had some sun in the Spring, I moved them round the garden so they got as much sun as possible. But it has been a terrible summer. Every time there has been a ray of sunshine, they’ve tried to flower but the rain comes in and strips them off. They’ve gone weirdly bushy, and as they haven’t set any fruit, I can’t see them growing any chillis. Maybe next year…

September

Well, that didn’t work brilliantly. I blame the weather.