Gardening
Q & A
Early vegetable growing
'I would like make a start on growing vegetables now - but is there anything I can grow this early?', asks a reader. Acclaimed gardening writer, Val Bourne responds
Anything that’s sown or grown in February has to be truly hardy for obvious reasons and you are always gambling a little when sowing that early. So I only recommend the following crops - dwarf broad beans, dwarf peas and early carrots. However you can also plant garlic, shallot and yellow onion sets - as long as the sets (small bulbs) haven’t been heat-treated. I also recommend investing in some heavy-duty, polythene cloches to warm the soil up for later March sowings. Prepare the ground first and then cover.
Dwarf varieties of broad bean with pale-seeds are much hardier than taller, green-seeded varieties. The two best early varieties are ‘The Sutton’ and ‘Claudia Aquadulce’ and these shorter varieties don’t need staking in most gardens. When it comes to peas, the shorter round-seeded varieties, ‘Feltham First’ and ‘Meteor’, are the hardiest and they can be sown in February. However these early ‘marrowfat’ varieties lack the sweetness and colour of later, wrinkle-seeded varieties like ‘Early Onward’.
Shallots, garlic and yellow onion sets can also be planted now. But red onions are less cold-tolerant. Onions prefer rich soil as they are shallow rooted. Shallots and garlic prefer a warm, sunny position.
Broad beans
Use two lines (string tied between short sticks) mark out a double row 24 inches apart. Sow your bean seeds 1 and a half inches (5 cm) deep and 9 inches (22 cm) apart. I usually put two seeds in each hole, vertically positioned with the scar downwards. I also sow several seeds at the end of each row for gapping up. You can also buy ready-grown plants of these varieties (www.organicplants.co.uk) or sow seeds under cover and then plant them out. Pick off any black-fly infested leaves and pinch out the tops once the first beans form to encourage more flower buds.
Excellent later varieties (they will need support)
- 'Imperial Green Long Pod'
- 'Jubilee Hysor'
Peas
Many gardeners fail with peas simply because they don’t plant enough seeds. The best method is to zigzag lots of seeds across a shallow, foot-wide trench before adding twiggy supports or nets. In good growing conditions the tips of the peas will appear within 7-10 days so prepare for the enemies - the birds and mice. Mouse traps and wire netting should do the trick. Once through and away, water well with cans of water whenever it’s dry.
Remember sow plenty!
- One for the mouse
- One for the crow
- One to rot
- And one to grow
Later varieties are taller, but there are more peas in each pod and they are bright-green and very sweet.
Excellent Later Varieties (all AGM varieties from Thompson & Morgan)
- 'Ambassador' maincrop
- 'Hurst Greenshaft' maincrop
- 'Balmoral' late maincrop
Onions, shallots and garlic
All three are members of the allium family, but they are treated slightly differently when planted.
Onion sets can be submerged so the tip just shows. Shallots are usually placed half in the soil and half out. Garlic is planted deeper (5-10 cm or 2- 4 inches) and it’s the earliest of the three to be planted. It needs a cold ‘conditioning‘ spell and can be planted from late autumn onwards. Space cloves 10cm (4 inches) apart in rows 30 cm (12 inches) apart.
Always trim the papery tops off all sets carefully with a sharp pair of scissors. This help to prevent birds from pulling planted sets out by their papery tips.
Shallots
Shallots sets are traditionally sown on the shortest day and harvested on the longest because they take roughly half a year or 26 weeks to mature. They prefer warm, sunny summers and the rounder shallots keep better than the longer thin varieties. They are delicious roasted or added to casseroles and they have a subtler, more aromatic, flavour than onions. The red varieties are the tastiest, but the yellow-skinned ones keep for longer. If you've room go for both.
Despite being smaller in size than onions, shallots actually take up more room because one set produces a cluster of five to nine babies. As they mature, the bulbs splay outwards. Plant 20 cm (7- 9 inches) apart, pushing the set halfway into the soil, and space the rows 23 cm (9 inches) apart. Avoid planting on newly manured ground and try to give your shallots a warm, sun-baked spot if possible because they grow better and ripen better in sunny summers. But although they are not quite as hardy as onions they often store for longer.
Excellent varieties
Red (both Marshalls - www.marshalls-seeds.co.uk).
- 'Pikant' and Red Sun
Yellow (both D.T. Brown - www.dtbrownseeds.co.uk)
- 'Golden Gourmet'
- 'Topper'
Onions
Onions enjoy well-dug, fertile ground which has been manured or composted a season or two before planting. Space your sets 15 cm ( 6 inches apart) in rows 22 cm (9 inches) apart and push each set into the ground so that the tip is at ground level. It’s essential to keep down the weeds by using a small onion hoe because shallots and onions are very shallow-rooted and they can can’t cope with competition from weeds.
Always look for medium-sized sets about an inch across. They are less likely to bolt than larger bulbs.
As with shallots, there are red-skinned and yellow-skinned onion varieties. But red onions are harder to grow well and they need better growing conditions. However a row of gleaming 'Red Baron' is a sumptuous sight in summer and red onions have a sweeter flavour when cooked too. Excellent yellow-skinned globe-onion varieties include 'Hercules' and 'Sturon'. 'Stuttgarter Giant' is a flatter onion that also does well (all widely available).
Heat-treated shallot and onion sets
Heat-treated sets are more-expensive and they aren’t usually available until late March. The heat treatment makes them less likely to bolt, or run to seed. If bolting does occur remove the flower bud and stem.
Early carrots
Carrots are umbellifers - members of the cow parsley family. Other members include parsnip, fennel and parsley. Umbellifers germinate best in temperatures of 12 C (50 - 55 F) and above. However some varieties of carrot can be sown early and these include 'Early Nantes' and 'Adelaide'.
Use a line and make a shallow drill and water it well. Sow seeds by sprinkling thinly 1 - 2 cm (half an inch) deep in rows 15 cm apart (6 in). Germination takes approximately 14 - 21 days if the temperature is consistently above 7 c (45 F). Thin to 4 - 5 cm (3 in) - preferably on a damp day when seedlings can be lifted easily without alerting pests.
Be adventurous - go multicoloured
Most carrot varieties are orange because they were bred by patriotic Dutchmen who wanted to honour the House of Orange. Multicoloured carrots are fun to grow, attractive on the plate and they contain a wide variety of different antioxidants.
Thompson & Morgan sell a Healthy Coloured Collection of five carrots specially selected for their health benefits when eaten raw. They are Purple Haze, Yellowstone, Healthmaster, Sugarsnax and Rainbow.
More gardening
Reader comments
Oxfam Shops are selling organic and heritage seeds as part of a new gardening range, including some unusual types of vegetables.
Posted by: Bob Needham | 12/02/2009 00:24:56
there are never hints on trying to grow veg. in an area 1600ft up with high winds.even tunnels will not stay fixed.
Posted by: colin hunter | 30/01/2009 17:35:28
