I'm tempted to throw the towel in

Started by Hazelb, August 01, 2012, 14:37:06

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Hazelb

I'm sure I can't be the only one.  :-\

I always get a wobble late summer and soon change my mind as i start harvesting the veggies .

But this year...blight, rot, lack of germination and a slug plague.....not a lot is coming good.

I'm doing a bit of week killing at the moment, then I might dig the plot over and have a long holiday from it.

I will have some purple sprouting and leeks to harvest, but not much else.

Nice days have been so few and far between this year, when one comes along I want to go out and make the most of it or just potter in the garden, rather than spend half a day on the plot.

I'm sure I'm not the only one?




Hazelb


GRACELAND

i don't belive death is the end

Flighty

No you're not the only one!
There have been several threads on this topic recently.
It's been the worse year that most gardeners can remember, especially for growing vegetables what with poor germination, too many slugs, now blight and the constant dreadful weather...
Some people have already given up for the year, and many have started thinking about next year when, hopefully, it will be better!

Flighty's plot,  http://flightplot.wordpress.com,  is my blog.

I support the Gardening with Disabilities Trust, http://www.gardeningwithdisabilitiestrust.org.uk

Hazelb

For me, I think it's the poor germination that's been the toughest. I've lost count of the rows of carrots /beetroot and chard I've sown.

It's finding all the 'goodies' in amongst the weeds that  keeps me going every year.

i think I'll try and put most of the plot to bed for the autumn. Weed, cut the paths, dig over the bits that aren't doing anything... 

I hope next year is a brighter one.

gazza1960

I think we all need a bloody great big A4A group hug as I too have had so many miserable days over the plot when it should be therapy of the growing kind.......well not this season,,,,utter crapp!!!!!!!!!!!!!

well,,here ya go......im throwing me arms out wide to scoop you all up and give you and me a d**n good shake to rid us of the miseries...... ::)

GazNjude

elvis2003

Thanks guys,needed that as just heard one of my oldest chums is packing in,we went to little school together then rediscovered our friendship at the plot.....may I add myself to the group hug and here is to 2013...when we will all have prob covered our entire plots with polytunnels  ;D
when the going gets tough,the tough go digging

Flighty

#6
Hazel I sow nearly all my vegetable seeds direct in the ground and almost nothing has germinated this year as either they've been washed away in heavy downpours, rotted in waterlogged soil or if they have then been eaten by slugs.
I've no beetroot, carrots, chard, courgettes, French climbing beans, lettuce or spring onions from at least two sowings of seeds.  
I've just sown a third lot of runner beans in the hope that I may just get some pods in late October.
Fingers crossed for next year!  

I've probably got the most colourful plot on the site though!
https://twitter.com/Sofaflyer/status/226324298493747201/photo/1/large
Flighty's plot,  http://flightplot.wordpress.com,  is my blog.

I support the Gardening with Disabilities Trust, http://www.gardeningwithdisabilitiestrust.org.uk

GRACELAND

Quote from: Flighty on August 01, 2012, 16:20:51
Hazel I sow nearly all my vegetable seeds direct in the ground and almost nothing has germinated this year as either they've been washed away in heavy downpours, rotted in waterlogged soil or if they have then been eaten by slugs.
I've no beetroot, carrots, chard, courgettes, French climbing beans, lettuce or spring onions from at least two sowings of seeds.  
I've just sown a third lot of runner beans in the hope that I may just get some pods in late October.
Fingers crossed for next year!  

I've probably got the most colourful plot on the site though!
https://twitter.com/Sofaflyer/status/226324298493747201/photo/1/large


nice send some seed my way please  ;) :) :D ;D
i don't belive death is the end

caroline7758

Yes, I never used to like pot marigolds, thought they were too garish and invasive, but now I know they are slug, pigeon and crap summer-proof and they brighten up my plot , I'm a big fan! ;D

Hazelb

Quote from: caroline7758 on August 01, 2012, 18:04:47
Yes, I never used to like pot marigolds, thought they were too garish and invasive, but now I know they are slug, pigeon and crap summer-proof and they brighten up my plot , I'm a big fan! ;D


Hang on!  aren't the flowers edible as well?  ;D

Tee Gee

I have been reading this thread and the other one on the go on a similar theme.

Well I have had my plots for around twenty five years and for the last four or five I have threatened to give up, but come the end of the season when it is time to winter dig( something I like doing) and its time to order the next seasons seeds I have changed my mind.

OK this year because of the low light levels I think it is the worst season I have ever had, but that's not why I am thinking of giving up!

I don't mind competing with nature as I like this challenge!

No! It's the cra**y compost we are getting that's putting me off.

This is the third season on the bounce I have got off to a bad start and I put it down to the stuff we are being sold as "compost"

Then when you find that unbeknown to you, farmers are using weed killers on there land and it ends up on your plot this is the last straw!( and straw is often the operative word)

I have decided to give it one more year but I am going to do it " my way" and that is;

To hell with the PC crowd and the politicians I am going to buy bales of peat( in fact it is already ordered) and make my own compost.

OK it might work out a bit more expensive but when I calciulate what I have lost this year and add it to what I paid for the cr*p  it might work out cheaper in the end.

What annoys me about the whole issue is; it is not a level playing field,commercial growers have access to composts that the general public don't.

Commercial growers who have a licence to state their produce is "organic" can use and have access to chemicals that complies with the licence so again it is not a level playing field ( not that I am in the habit of using chemical)

So basically it is all this inequality that's hissing me off not the weather!

I have lived man and boy with the fickle "British Weather" so I think I can do the same for the rest of my life, so I do not consider that as an issue for giving up.

So here's hoping 2013 is a more successful year?

So I hope all you people that are thinking of giving up.....think again!


I'll get off my soapbox now....Tg

bluecar

Hello Tee Gee.

It's always worth one more go. Where are you getting your peat from? What will your compost mix be?

Regards

Bluecar

shirlton

I can remember TeeGee almost adamant that he was giving up and I can remember trying to persuade him not to.
This year has been a difficult year for most of us but lets all see what next year brings eh! ;D
When I get old I don't want people thinking
                      "What a sweet little old lady"........
                             I want em saying
                    "Oh Crap! Whats she up to now ?"

Han

I thought it was more or less my fault. As a complete newbie I made many mistakes. Putting out stuff and asking myself the next day: where did I put it? Cannot find a sign of them anymore......Unexperienced, not aware of slugs, rabbits and the fact that in the North 'spring and summer' are a bit late..... :). And yes, the red onions I picked up yesterday are rather small....and yes, I thought it was all my fault.....not putting compost in and so on because I thought that here we have rich soil.

Reading all your comments on a 'bad season' I just think: what will next year bring? Not making the same mistakes as I did this year, getting a bit more experienced, knowing a bit better which seeds to buy, planting out in time, better control of slugs, maybe a better summer, less rain.....I am very curious what next year will bring and am dreaming of enormous crops, gardens full of flowers............. :)

Digeroo

QuoteThen when you find that unbeknown to you, farmers are using weed killers on there land and it ends up on your plot this is the last straw!( and straw is often the operative word)


As you all know I habitually rant about weedkillers which I do not want.

I am very lucky because I have access to a very good horticultural supplier, who sell professional quality products at a very competative price.  Not only that once you have bought something you drive up to the warehouse door and they load it into the back of your vehicle, no lugging it round the car park.  Self service is highly over rated.

Han I hope you continue to enjoy the challenges.  I also have pigeons, deer, dogs, and someone with size 10 boots to content with as well as very gravelly/stony soil.   I know the foot prints in the middle of my beds are not mine, firstly they are too big and secondly I do not plant/sow something and then put my bit foot in the middle of it.




galina

Quote from: Han on August 02, 2012, 09:41:19
I thought it was more or less my fault. As a complete newbie I made many mistakes. Putting out stuff and asking myself the next day: where did I put it? Cannot find a sign of them anymore......Unexperienced, not aware of slugs, rabbits and the fact that in the North 'spring and summer' are a bit late..... :). And yes, the red onions I picked up yesterday are rather small....and yes, I thought it was all my fault.....not putting compost in and so on because I thought that here we have rich soil.

Reading all your comments on a 'bad season' I just think: what will next year bring? Not making the same mistakes as I did this year, getting a bit more experienced, knowing a bit better which seeds to buy, planting out in time, better control of slugs, maybe a better summer, less rain.....I am very curious what next year will bring and am dreaming of enormous crops, gardens full of flowers............. :)

Han - no NOT your fault, it affects us all.  I have had (touch wood so far .....) slightly fewer problems than some, because I sow very little direct.  Plant out, a bottle cloche over each plant until they run out - tedious, lot of work .......  but this year it might have just been very necessary.  Doesn't mean that I don't have voles biting off beans which are fully up the poles, right at the base killing the plants in the process :-( and all my outdoors tomatoes had to be harvested (only 2 were red, the rest still green, but they are now indoors ripening on the windowsill, the blighted plants have been destroyed).  Potato blight fortunately came when the potatoes were big enough to harvest and some blight resistant ones are surviving, but at one end of my potato patch harvest was so poor, I can only think they rotted when the plot was under water :-(.

Carrots eventually germinated, but i don't know what happened to my parsnips first AND second sowing.  One was fresh seed from the seed circle, the other a commercial packet, because I wanted to try out and contrast with my variety which I had been growing for years and saving seed.  I am sure it was the weather and not the seed :-(

Lettuces were/are good, but each one was planted out as seedling plant with a bottle cloche.

Chard is fine (self seeded).  Courgettes and squash is late, but finally doing something.  Yes, each and every plant had either a large bottle around it, or (I don't have many really big bottles) a ring of crushed eggshells to deter the dreaded slugs.  I save all my eggshells  for this purpose.

Yep, some weed killer damage from next door too, guess with all the rain more people did more weed killing and it does drift.  I no longer get horse manure from any source, but make as much compost as I can and use chicken pellets, fish meal, hoof and horn, dried blood etc  Reasonable deals from Hants potato day and also Wilkinson has these on offer at times.

Peppers in the cold frame are flowering and late.  Tomatoes in the greenhouse are ok, but very late too.

Gazza, thank you for the group hug - wide open arms here as well to make it go round everybody and hoping that nobody will give up - please, hang in there .......  (..A4A....)

Please don't think about 2013 yet.  This is an opportunity to try autumn and winter gardening.  Look at what you can sow now.   Salad stuff for over winter, turnips, radishes, orientals, autumn peas ... try it.  Chicory and endive, but also lettuce and lamb's lettuce, the orientals, Chinese cabbage is very nice, another lot of beetroot.  Keep sowing and if you can cloche stuff or have a poly or greenhouse, then you should be able to harvest fresh salads and new veg for Christmas dinner and overwinter for a good flush of greens just when everything starts growing again in March.

In the south another lot of dwarf french beans will work too.

This season is not over yet, by a long way.  :-)


Duke Ellington

Yes it has been a bad year but.......

Carrots all grown in raised containers are excellent.
Lettuce all good
French beans gorgeous
Runner beans slow but coming on really well now
winter onions really good
Beetroot very good
Cabbages wonderful.
Sweet peppers good
Peas a success.
Cucumbers slow poor yield but at least I am harvesting them.

My failures....
Squashes
Sweet corn ...I doubt if I will harvest any :'(
Summer onions awful!!!
Greenhouse tomatoes now blighted :'(
Potatoes rubbish
dont be fooled by the name I am a Lady!! :-*

Tee Gee


Quote;
It's always worth one more go. Where are you getting your peat from? What will your compost mix be?

I get all my composts,fertilisers etc wholesale!

I am part of an allotment association where providing we place an order in excess of £300 we get discounted rates (Trade)

Similarly with seeds we get our seeds through 'Leisure Gardeners Association" (Kings seeds)

My mix is as written on the packet of  "Chempak  Potting Base"mix

I also visit the Harrogate Autumn show each year where a number of seed merchants sell there seeds off a £1 per packet, which is often cheaper than Kings.

So as you will have noticed I am always on the look out for a bargain.

I don't particularly go after the cheapest seeds, I tend to buy F1 varieties which when discounted works out around the cost of average priced seeds.

For seeds like Beetroot and salad crops I buy the cheapest I can get,whereas with Brassicas these are always F1

So that is basically  how I deal with my purchasing!

antipodes

Hazel this is my second year of completely blighted tomato crop, so I am disheartened but certainly not ready to throw in the towel! I had my onions and garlic, not the best but still pretty good, my potatoes which we got an excellent crop of, despite a bit of blight, annd a good crop of beans which is only just starting. I also had excellent lettuce and baby leaf and mizuna and beetroot, and late carrots are growing for the first time! Ok, courgettes and cukes are pretty much rubbish, and no toms, and probably only a couple of aubergines at the rate they are going, but it's always up and down.
I do agree about the autumn and winter garden though. get your self plenty of leeks in, they are really resistant to most things, sow winter cabbage and some hardy scarole type lettuces and swiss chard and late beets and your Pak choi type thing and you will still have veg for a while yet. And hang in there!
I second the group hug!
<<<<<<< o>>>>>>>>>
2012 - Snow in February, non-stop rain till July. Blight and rot are rife. Thieving voles cause strife. But first runner beans and lots of greens. Follow an English allotment in urban France: http://roos-and-camembert.blogspot.com

Digeroo

 
Quoteplenty of leeks in, they are really resistant to most things
Except moth and rust. ???

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